Posted 2023-November-14, 11:25
This hand is an example of a hand that I have a disagreement with one of the sayings I heard when I started up. The saying was there was no hand that was too strong to open weak, but too weak to open normally. Basically, the saying was indicating that if you have a playable hand, you must act immediately and shouldn't pass. I disagree with this. With single suit hands, yes, you should take a stance and act on it. With 2 suiters like this, I find it can really pay off to pass initially and hope something happens that clarifies where you should go or allows you to show the strange nature of the hand.
The plus side of this approach, is that if it's your partner who has the good hand, then they won't push it to places it shouldn't go because you don't have enough to really open. For example, partner insists on bidding 3n and now you get to guess if that is right. The downside, is that the opponents may find a good place to play because you have given them room to figure out where to play.
If you disagree with this idea and insist on bidding now, then this hand is way too good to preempt opposite an unpassed partner. This hand can easily make a black suit slam opposite a lot of normal openers. Of course, it can also go down several opposite a lot of powerful openers. The way to figure it out easily is in the first paragraph, imo.