mikeh, on 2014-January-28, 17:19, said:
4441 hands are rare. 17+ hands are rare. 4441 17+ hands are very rare, which means that devoting an entire opening call to them makes no sense unless you see such hands as impossible to bid.
They can be difficult to bid, but generally speaking standard-based bidding methods can cope reasonably well with them, altho there will often be a need to make a slight distortion, such as bidding an appropriate number of notrump.
Mini-roman arises far more often, simply because 11-15 hands are more common than 17+ hands. However, standard methods should have no problem bidding these hands. Strong hands can be problematic because simple rebids may be non-forcing, and who likes to reverse or jumpshift with 4=4 shape in the bid suits, not to mention an unbid 4 card suit that may never be shown. These problems don't arise with the weaker openings, so using mini-roman is inventing a (bad) solution to a non-existent problem. FWIW, whenever I play against anyone with mini-roman on their CC, I assume I am playing against a weak pair, and I don't think I have ever been wrong about this.
As a historical note, mini-Roman, not surprisingly, also has it's roots in the original Roman Club system, starting out as a 2♣ opening to show a 12-16 HCP 3 suiter. Since almost everybody else uses 2♣ for some other purpose, 2♦ is substituted for the old Roman 2♣ bid.
I disagree that the primary reason for playing mini-Roman 2♦ is to handle the bidding of 4441 hands because they are difficult to bid, at least for those who know something about bidding theory. The main purpose should be to clarify that your other sequences show a real unbalanced hand, or a real balanced hand, or whatever your bidding sequence is trying to accomplish, as opposed to distorting your bidding when you have a 3 suiter.