luke warm, on May 13 2006, 09:16 PM, said:
kenberg, on May 13 2006, 05:12 PM, said:
Playing pick-up, if that's the issue, I would bid 5H. It's a crapshoot.
Ken
well, if 4nt implied 2 suits, and if they are the minors, doesn't 5
♥ defeat the purpose? as phil said, if he has clubs and hearts, he'll bid 5
♥ over 5
♦... maybe i'm wrong, but i really don't see any option
Yes. If 4NT implies two suits, 5D is clear. What I thought I was making clear is that some people use 4NT to show a two-suiter, some people use 4NT as a general TO. In the latter case I bid 5H.
If you look at the card of many people, it will say that doubles are for TO through 4H. If it is so marked, then the doube of 4H (TO) is treated differently than the double of 4S (not TO). In both cases the X will often be left in, but those who play the double as TO will, naturally, take it out more often. You need, or at least might want, a take out bid, or rather a bid that partner can trust shows at least some sort of tolerance for all suits. If 4S-X does not show that tolerance, than, for many people, 4S-4NT does. In that case, 5H is by far the best call.
If you are convinced that everyone (or that all reasonable people) play 4S-4NT as two-suited, then sure, you bid 4D. In my experience, there are two distinct ways of playing 4S-4NT, and if I know which way my partner does it, I will respond correctly. If 4NT can be based on, say, 1-4-3-5 then I would not expect him to correct 5D to 5H, as he thinks diamonds is my longest suit. If instead 4N shows a two-suiter (so he cannot bid 4N with 1-4-3-5) then I suppose it is C-D but if by some chance it is C-H he will certainly correct.
Those who think there is only one acceptable meaning for 4S-4NT will have stopped reading this long before now.
Ken