I assume, like we do here, that "strong is '22+ or equivalent PT w/defence' ", or "Precision 1
♣ is 16+, maybe as low as 14 with say AKxxx AKxxx in the majors".
I fully expect that most if not all "strong 2
♣" agreements in the EBU are "some from column A, some from column B, some from column C" agreements - as would mine or yours. And that is as it should be - "HCP is not the only way to evaluate hands", as they say; "length takes more tricks than Aces", as they say.
SB's issue is that he is:
- Playing that *all* bids that meet any of the three criteria are opened 2♣ (although how this could actually work in the normal hands eludes me; I'm sure that lamford's SB plays better than Your Humble SB);
- Carefully using definitions used for legality (but never used outside of that) to (mis-)describe his agreement to the opponents, in the hopes that they will misdefend (as opposed to playing an outlandish agreement in the hopes that it is difficult to defend against); and
- Obnoxiously claiming that this is IOTTMCO, and (likely) that, in fact, if the opponents describe their 2♣ opener as "strong, artificial and forcing to game or 2NT", but would open this hand anything *but* 2♣, they're the ones that are not carefully describing their agreements.
I, too, think that the *agreement* to open this hand 2
♣ is legal under the "strong" definition - I've said so from the start. Deliberately crafting an explanation designed to produce a false expectation in the opponents, where such a misapprehension is to his advantage, is the problem.
It's like the pair who, pre-Announcements, played, and marked as such on their card, 1NT:
12-14 VUL
15-17 NV
and just hoped people would read what they expected to read. I don't know how much it got them, but after they had to Announce their NT ranges, they switched to "normal" variable PDQ, I'm told.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)