LBengtsson, on 2021-June-06, 12:49, said:
constructive bidding always wins against guesswork. in the long game. sometimes - this is obvious - the opponents can benefit from your bidding, but you should not be scared to use your methods as discussed with your partner. what a partnership need is a structured way of how they bid with different auctions and different hand shapes.
look at meckwell relay precision. one of the worlds greatest bridge partnerships use many asking and relay bids to define hand shape and controls. if that means you end in good contract opposed to bad one, then that is where you need to be. even if the opponents have a picture of both hands shape/point count.
I played relay for a number of years, doing fairly well by our modest standards.
Our methods were designed, in part, to maximize the times that relayer declared.
We had many auctions, especially to slams, where the opponents knew dummys shape, number of controls, which queens he had, and (for 3suits) whether he has either one of the AK or either both AK or neither (relayer knew which...0 or 2), but all they knew about declarers hand is that he placed the contract opposite what partner showed.
We played in the context of 2/1, so significantly different from Meckwell, but they tend to reverse their suit showing by responder in their 1C auctions, partly for economy but also, Im sure, to maximize the chances of the big club hand, doing the relays, becoming declarer.
In this way, when it works, there is far less information leakage to the defenders than in natural, descriptive methods
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari