foobar, on 2017-October-01, 11:57, said:
Not sure whether you really intended to rank strong club with limited openings at the very bottom
Not what you'd expect from a regular poster in this forum, was it?
awm, on 2017-October-02, 02:53, said:
The sequences in standard bidding for 1M openings with extras are really bad -- it's very easy to miss game or play in the wrong game or play in a dumb 2nt when opener makes a try opposite a weak response, etc. And this isn't just my opinion -- it's the reason lots of good pairs have taken to playing Bart or Gazzilli or the like (which create other issues of course). It's also the reason you see people open 1nt or rebid 2nt with singletons, six card minors, five card majors, etc. Basically their methods for dealing with hands of 16-18 HCP are terrible.
Of course there are negatives to a strong club too, but one of the big wins is much better methods on the 16-18 range. In unobstructed auctions it's not just a little better either, but ridiculously better! Even in competition we usually come out ahead because partner can show a suit in a lot of auctions where he can't in standard (i.e. 1H-2S and partner has some 2236 eight count, he cannot really bid, but after strong club you have an easy auction).
Anyway I don't see much point in adopting strong club (with the attending problems around minor suits, especially in competition) only to throw the 16-18 5-card major hands back into the awfulness of standard bidding on hands in this range!
So I'd rate a > c > e > b > d.
The "standard" framework was supposed to be broad enough to include systems with some artificial rebids over 1x-1y/N, too. Sorry if that wasn't clear.
But anyway, I agree with you to the extent that if the standard framework is split into
e1) standard with only natural rebids over 1x-1y/N
e2) standard with some artificial rebids over 1x-1y/N,
then my ranking becomes
e1) < a) < b) < c) < d) < e2).