gnasher, on 2012-May-02, 05:12, said:
That might be what you intend, but why do you assume that everyone else wants to do the same? Personally I find that bidding works better if you treat it as a conversation rather than an interrogation, especially when the strength is fairly evenly divided and both hands have a wide range of shapes.
I don't think it's difficult to devise methods to deal with four-card majors in the responding hand after an inverted raise, certainly if it's a 1♣ opening. For example, without trying hard at all:
1♣-2♣
2♦ = balanced
2M = natural unbalanced
2NT = unbalanced with diamonds
3♣ = one-suited, minimum, NF
3♦/♥/♠ = splinter
After 1♣-2♣;2♦:
2M/3D = four-card suit and a game-force
2NT = balanced invitation with only four clubs
3♣ = invitation with five clubs
3NT = balanced game-force
3M = splinter
After 1♣-2♣;2M or 1♣-2♣;2NT, everything except 3♣ is game-forcing. Bidding proceeds naturally.
After 1♦-2♦ it's sligtly more challenging, because we have one fewer bid available. A simple solution is to play 1♦-2♦;2♥-2♠ as either major.
Edit: Corrected nonsense in last sentence.
Andy: you have firstly disagreed with my observation that the 2m bidder has (often temporarily) assumed captaincy and then gone on to propose a rebid structure that shows that captaincy has, again perhaps temporarily, been assumed by responder.
When one partner makes a forcing bid and the other bidder is constrained to describe his had artificially, that, to me at least, smacks of a captaincy auction. If you disagree, it may be because we ascribe different meanings to captaincy.
I find it ironic that we are having this discussion, because I must have posted, in other threads, countless arguments to the effect that bidding is usually best viewed as a conversation. Of course, we all use methods that convert the conversation into an interrogation at times, and relayers frequently have little conversational element in their constructive sequences.
Compare 1
♦ 2
♣ 2
♥: to almost all of us, this is a conversation...the precise message sent by 2
♥ will vary from partnership to partnership, but virtually everyone uses these 3 calls naturally.
1
♦ 2
♦ 2
♥: in your structure, 2
♥ is a coded response, and presumably responder will have a way of asking opener to clarify...iow, responder will often NOT converse with opener...responder will interrogate opener.
FWIW, in my view, an efficient inverted minor structure, especially when 2m is gf, will use artificiality. This is especially true for diamonds, where as you concede, space is constrained.
One last point: I think all would agree that 1
♣ 2
♣ is an easier start than 1
♦ 2
♦.
Yet many of us open 1
♣ on a doubleton, if 4432 (I'm not saying that that is the only shape on which some posters choose to open on a doubleton, but it is a common one).
Now bidding 2
♣ with 5 card support seems even more misguided than usual. We are establishing our 7+ fit by bypassing the 1-level, leaving finding our 8 card major fit to the 3 level. The arguments for diamonds are different, in that when we hold 5 diamonds as responder, we know we have a playable fit. But, as noted above, we are now limited in bidding space. I suggest it was no coincidence that you gave a fairly complete club structure yet very little about your proposed diamond structure.
That isn't to say that including a major in your inverted is impossible or unplayable...I've never said that. I just think it is a lot of effort that detracts from other, better options, and addresses a problem that is usually a non-issue.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari