hrothgar, on Aug 3 2007, 03:37 PM, said:
Sorry: I know this is snarky, but I can't resist
From the sounds of things, you're using
1♣ - (P) - 1♦ as showing 4+ Hearts (potentially in Walsh style where you could have a longer minor)
In a similar vein
1♣ - (P) - 1♥ shows 4+ Spades, could have a longer minor
I assume that 1♣ - (P) - 1♠ shows an unbalanced hand with Diamonds
Whats your suggested defense to these nefarious transfer responses? You see, I'm having an amazing amount of trouble getting defenses approved to some transfer opening bids that look to be very similar. It would be very helpful to understand the wonderously simple defense that you have available to these transfer responses. Who knows. It might even help me get a submission through the Conventions Committee.
There are actually several significant differences between this scheme and transfer openings. In particular:
(1) It's much easier to defend artificial bids
when they are forcing. To give an example, suppose I have a good hand with 6
♠. If my RHO opens 1
♠, I am guaranteed that either opponents will play in spades (likely good result for my side) or that I will get another chance to bid after passing RHO's opening. If my RHO opens 1
♥ showing spades the same would be true
if it's forcing, but not if LHO will frequently pass holding short spades and a weak hand. Note that 1
♣-P-1
♥ (transfer to spades) is unlimited and forcing whereas the Moscito-style 1
♥ opening (showing spades) is limited and not forcing.
(2) One can argue that if a certain defense to a natural bid works well, then a similar defense to the immediate lower bid showing the same hand type will work reasonably well. Since 1
♣-P-1
♠ showing spades (might have longer minor) is essentially standard, everyone is presumed to have a "pretty good" defense to this. Using the same defense to 1
♣-P-1
♥ (showing spades, might have longer minor) will not be too great an inconvenience. But we can argue that 1
♠ opening showing 4+
♠, limited, possibly light, may have longer minor is
already non-standard and that defending this as one would defend a 1
♠ opening which is essentially unlimited and virtually always opener's longest suit is
already substantially sub-optimal. Changing things around further so this hand opens 1
♥ instead of 1
♠ makes the defense people are using even less effective, at which point they
really need some artificial defensive method. You can always get from a standard method to a really weird method via a sequence of seemingly small steps, but this doesn't mean the defense to the standard method will be any good as a defense to the weird method (especially if a lot of these steps were needed), or that the weird method should necessarily be allowed just because the standard method was.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit