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One thing I feel weird about, from the first day I start playing bridge to now, is about people's opinion about 2 level overcall. I feel like people around me come from a different world where those bridge authors come from.
At least, based on my understanding of what those authors say, a 2 level overcall should in general, though not promise, shows a decent 6-card suit, close to opening strength at least(or maybe more than opening strength if you open light). 5-card crappy suit with balanced shape(5332/5422) with 14HCP or less, is an automatic pass. I'll try to give some example from various books,
Porten's "Introduction to Defensive Bidding"
RHO open 1♠, you have ♠K32 ♥82 ♦AQ763 ♣K76, he says you should pass at any vulnerability.
Lawrence's "The Complete Book on Overcall"
RHO open 1♠, you're white at IMP, you have ♠3 ♥K42 ♦KQ987 ♣K542, he says you should pass.
RHO open 1♥, you're red at IMP, you have ♠K2 ♥J63 ♦KQ8654 ♣AJ, he says you should pass!(2♦ in MP)
Gitelman's software "Learn to Play Bridge"
"Suit length and quality are important factors in deciding whether to overcall with a hand with minimum values. Try to have a strong 6-card suit to overcall at the 2-level or higher"
In more advanced book like Robson and Segal's "Partnership Bidding at Bridge" even though they don't say explicitly, the offensive competitive raise style they suggest seems only work if the overcall promise fairly strong offensive value.
However, my experience was more than 90% of the people I've met, either my fellows or opponents, online or offline, seems to think any opening hand with a 5-card suit worth an overcall and when I pass with 13HCP hand with a 5 cards suit everybody thinks I'm weird.
Take the example above, RHO open 1♠(assume first seat), you have ♠K32 ♥82 ♦AQ763 ♣K76 at any vulnerability, I think "standard approach" is to pass and bid 2NT if partner balance with X. If my hand is ♠832 ♥K2 ♦AQ763 ♣K76, then 3♦ after partner X. If opp keep bidding after I pass then I choose to defense. In reality I rarely see people bid this type of hand this way, more often than not I see a 2♦ overcall, sometime with same shape/HCP but even worse suit quality.
Maybe I'm too old-schooled or simply misunderstand something. But let's share the opinion about this issue, if you're going to write a set of rules/a chapter in book about overcall at 2 level, what are you going to say? What's your opinion about the example I give above? Do you agree that most people's 2-level overcall are less disciplined compare to textbook? Do you think overcalling 2-level more often with wider range hand, is a winning or losing strategy?