Frank Stewart said:
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Expert opinion would be split on what to open. I would not consider treating this balanced hand as two-suiter, so I would open 1♣, intending to raise a red-suit response or bid 1NT over 1♠. Many good players would open 1♦. (If the diamonds were strikingly strong, I might also.)
In some competitive situations, a 1♦ opening may work well:
West East
♠ 753 ♠J2
♥ AJ93 ♥ 742
♦ QT8 ♦AK64
♣KT4 ♣AQ73
West North East South
1♣ 2♠
Dbl pass 3♦ pass
5♣ Dbl All pass
East-West had a mix-up. East thought he was placing the contract when he bid 3♦; West thought East had reversed and held at least five clubs and extra strength. A 1♦ opening would have let East-West stop at 3♦, but the 1♣ opening wasn't at fault. Blame the result on South's preempt, a slightly unprepared negative double by West and the fact that East-West hadn't discussed this sequence.
This is all that Stewart has to say about this hand, or what to open with 4-4 in the minors.
A few weeks back, there was a long series of exchanges on this forum about whether the sequence 1♣-(1♠)-Dbl-(Pass);2♦ showed extra values or not. I believe I'm right in saying that the current consensus (as opposed to 10 or more years ago) is that this sequence is a reverse, showing 4-5 or more in the minors and considerable extra values.
So, I have several questions for those with more experience than mine.
1. Is this sequence analogous to the 1♣-(1♠)-Dbl-(Pass);2♦ one, so the 3♦ bid shows a reversing hand, and considerable extras? (My intuition is yes, that if you accept the lower sequence as showing extras then the higher one must also.)
2. Does Stewart's analysis sound right? Obviously, East-West should have discussed this sequence. However, he doesn't say what it should mean. I don't think the negative double was 'slightly unprepared'; even if West was 4-4 in the reds, so that he was totally prepared for the other suits by any standards, the mismatch between what values East thought he was showing and what West thought East was showing would still lead to trouble. And, I really laugh out loud at blaming South's 2♠ bid. If a small preempt that like can blow a big hole in our methods, then we need to do something to our methods. In this case, I guess that I do blame the 1♣ bid.
3. What do you open with 4-4 in the minors?