Hannie, on Sep 18 2007, 07:39 PM, said:
ArtK78, on Sep 18 2007, 04:05 PM, said:
OK.
Here is the be all and the end all of my argument for opening 2♣.
Suppose you open 1♠ and the auction proceeds PASS-PASS-PASS.
Improbable? Yes. Impossible? No. It has happened before.
To whom?
Do you know anybody who opened 1S with a 14-count and 8-4 shape and this got passed out?
If this is the best argument that you can give then I don't find it very convincing.
There are numerous stories of this type. I recounted one that I have heard attributed to Les Bart. It is an earlier post in this thread. The story goes that Les Bart held a hand with AKxxxxxxx of diamonds and possibly another honor card. He decided to pass to await developments. The developments were all pass. When his teammates heard about the passout, one of them asked incredulously "Did you really pass with AK ninth of diamonds?" to which Les replied "But they were AK EMPTY NINTH!"
It really is not too much different passing a hand with a 9 card diamond suit and about a 10 count and opening 1
♠ on a hand with 8 solid spades and a KJTx of hearts on the side.
I personally have had a very odd experience with a passout. I was playing Blue Club, and I had a 3-5-2-3 hand, just short of a strong 1
♣ opening bid, but good enough to canape into hearts. So, I opened 1
♦. It went all pass. Partner had about a 6 count with 4 diamonds and 4 hearts. From my failure to open 1
♣, he knew that game was unlikely. And he had 4 diamonds. Furthermore, it is not very likely that I would have a short diamond holding for a Blue Club 1
♦ opening - not as likely as a Precision 1
♦ opening. So he made a reasonable pass. I could not make 1
♦ on the lie of the cards. However, even though it was not a good contract, 4
♥ made at the other table.
Even with distributional hands, one must be aware that one bids do occasionally get passed out. Given that possibility, even if it is remote, one should not open with a one bid when one has game in hand. Find some other reasonable action, whether it be a 2
♣ opening, a Namyats bid, or a game-level preempt. But a one bid should not be considered.
Quite frankly, I don't see how opening this hand with a one-bid is going to help you get to the right spot anyway.