If the original poster just wanted to know what his system notes said about this sequence, presumably he could simply have read them for himself.
Assuming that the question is "What's the best way to handle this type of hand?", I think it's best to bid 2
♠. If you reverse on this hand you make the range of the reverse horribly wide.
Quote
2S would be a huge underbid, 4S has an excellent play facing Axxxx Qx xxx Qxx.
I think that's worth a move after 1
♣-1
♠;2
♠. You know you're opposite either a strong notrump or an unbalanced hand with clubs, and in the latter case Qxx is a pretty good holding.
The problem is worse in a strong-notrump framework, where I'd still raise to 2
♠ as opener, but would pass 2
♠ with the miracle eight-count.
Quote
On going debate on just how "lite" a reverse should be played.
The answer should vary according to the system, but not in the way that some posters seem to think. Playing a weak notrump, 1
♣-1
♠;2
♠ has a higher upper limit, so you should be less inclined to reverse on this shape than when playing a strong notrump.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2011-September-15, 02:43