mycroft, on 2021-January-02, 13:56, said:
"I have a 4 loser hand. I must open 2♣!"
"I'm at 3NT, and have no clue where or how high to play (except it's probably lower than 3NT!)"
Funny, that.
And that's without the opponents coming in and finding their spades. And you got very lucky that the diamonds are such that you didn't have a loser there either (and that they have 2 diamond losers in spades).
Strong bids aren't good bids, they're necessary bids. You should not stretch to put hands into your strong bid, especially when it's as space-wasting as this auction will be. 2NT is known as the "slam-killer" for a reason, and this hand is going to "open" even higher than that. Swap the pointeds, there's a case, especially playing "cheapest 3" rather than "2♥ ultra-negative".
This is a very useful and helpful point. I rarely bid 2
♣ for the same reason that I don't make a 2/1 bid or an FSF bid without careful thought.
I find it a problem that there is no opening bid that forces a response but allows you stop below game.
I know that's just me - inexperience talking - but I quite like the Benjamin 2 approach because the 2
♣ bid occupies that space. I am aware that decent players have better systems to cope with this - I'm not one of them.
My specific issue here was not the problem that I know about (my general level of incompetence) but the problem of how to interpret my CHO's bid.
I have copies of Dunning and Kruger's articles. I am quite literate on the topic of incompetence, but there are so many gaps it is often hard to decide which one to fill first.
In this post, the question concerns the meaning of the alerted 3NT, but your advice about the opening bid is well-taken. Thank you.