mgoetze, on May 16 2010, 01:22 PM, said:
How do you continue with a
- GF hand with 5 hearts,
- INV hand with 5 hearts,
- GF hand with 6+ hearts,
- INV hand with 6+ hearts?
Furthermore, it's not quite clear to me what this means for 1
♣-1
♠ (showing 5(?) diamonds). Do you complete the transfer with any 11-13 balanced with less than 4 (or 3?) diamonds? If so, what do you bid when you have opened a minimum 4414 - do you now have to pretend to have a real club suit?
Someone (I can't remember who) claimed that Transfer Walsh and XYZ do not mix well. It seems to me though that it should work fine over 1
♣-1
♦-1
♠ at least. Meanwhile, the best continuations after a 1NT rebid showing 17-19 balanced are not clear to me.
Incidentally, what do people think is a good minimum point count for responding 1
♣-1
♠, showing diamonds?
After opener accepts the transfer, showing 2-3 hearts, in my style, responder bids 2
♣, puppet to 2
♦ (to play or most invitational hands), and 2
♦ any gf. I don't understand why anyone says that this doesn't fit well with t-walsh, but maybe whoever it is can elucidate.
1
♣ 1
♦ 1
♥ 1
♠, natural and non-invitational
As for 1
♣ 1
♠, I like it as any of:
5-7 balanced, no major, or
11-12 balance, no major, or
any strength with diamonds
Opener will bid 1N with all minimum balanced hands and responder passes with 5-7, bids 2
♣ with diamonds (unwilling to play in 1N) or the 11-12 balanced, and 2N to puppet to 3
♣.
2
♦ is gf. 3M would be an auto-splinter.
One can meaningfully discuss the differences between bidding 2
♣ then a major compared to reversing into 2M over 1N.
If opener does anything other than 1N (he should bid on the assumption that you have a balanced hand, except he can bid 2
♦ with a good 4=5 minors where he can stand a correction, via 2N, to 3
♣, our bidding becomes natural.
1N may be rebid by opener with 4=4=1=4 or many 3=4=1=5 or 4=3=1=5 with no desire to rebid 2
♣.
So long as they stay out of our auction, we are in fine shape
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari