awm, on 2011-August-07, 22:40, said:
I've done a pretty thorough bridge browser study on these sorts of hands and 4♠ is a significantly winning bid at the table.
What VM1973's analysis misses is that opponents will often make incorrect competitive decisions over such a high-level opening. For example:
(1) We make 4♠, but opponents have a good sacrifice at the five-level or even a double-game swing. If we open 4♠ they will often not find it. If we open 1♠ (or 3♠) they often will.
(2) We cannot make 4♠ on best-defense, but opponents make the wrong lead and we grab some quick pitches. Again, a slower auction might help opponents get in a lead directional call or hear what responder's long suit is.
(3) Opponents mistakenly double a making 4♠, or fail to double a 4♠ that doesn't make (again when a slower auction would help them).
(4) Opponents take a phantom sacrifice over a non-making 4♠ and go for a number.
All of these sorts of things are difficult to evaluate by generating random hands and running simulations, but you can see them by exploring a large database of hands from real play.
Finally, it's important to remember that opening 1♠ does not solve all problems. Yes, it is possible to stay out of game if that is right, or to play in 3NT. But you will not always get these decisions correct; there can easily be hands where you miss a making game (if you plan to rebid 2♠ over 1NT for example and partner passes with i.e. ♠x ♥Axxx ♦xxxx ♣KQxx). Opening 4♠ puts a lot of pressure on the opponents to make a correct competitive decision (pass, double, or compete) and then get the subsequent defense right. In the long run this kind of action will be successful, even though it is easy to give examples where it doesn't work out, or even to argue statistically that it won't work against opponents who are (impossibly) double-dummy perfect in bidding and defense.
What you haven't said is if you specifically took the seat into account. I completely agree that a 4
♠ opening is likely to work in 1st and 3rd seat. You are, however, in 2nd seat and the opener has passed.
Using Bridge Baron I dealt 10 hands to analyze them. In all of the hands I held:
♠AKQ10987
♥2
♦2
♣5432
White vs. Red, 2nd seat, matchpoints, opener passes. This is, in my opinion, superior than culling a large database of people of all seats and drawing generalizations about what will happen. These were the results:
Hand 1:
4S and 1S lead to +450
3S and Pass lead to +200.
Hand 2:
4S and 1S lead to +420
3S leads to +100 (opponents bid 5
♦)
Pass leads to 4S doubled making.
Hand 3:
The most interesting hand, dummy hits with:
♠Jx
♥AKQxx
♦AKxxx
♣x
After a low heart lead I won on the board, ruffed a small heart in hand and ran the spades hoping for some kind of squeeze. In the end hearts broke 4-3 and +510 for everyone - flat.
Hand 4:
4S and 1S lead to +450
3S +200
Pass leads to 4S doubled +5
Hand 5:
4S and 1S lead to +450
3S and Pass lead to +200
Hand 6:
4S and 1S lead to +420
3S +170
Pass -> 4S*+4
Hand 7:
Regardless what you open you reach 4S*+5. Flat
Hand 8:
4S, 3S, and Pass lead to 4S*-1
1S +140
Hand 9:
Another very interesting hand.
4S gets cracked right off the bat and dummy hits with
♠Jxxxx (!) Routine play leads to 12 tricks.
3S, 1S, Pass lead to +480
Hand 10:
RHO has
♠Jxxxx of spades and 4S never has a prayer, but doesn't get doubled, either.
4S-2
3S-1
1S+100 (4H-1)
Pass+100 (4H-1) Although in all fairness, had I not previously played the hand 3 times, I might have taken an action after P-P-1H-P-1S-???
End Result:
3S +9
4S +16.5
Pass +17
1S +17.5
My conclusion: 3S doesn't work out, but the other 3 options are too close to call.