bluecalm, on 2012-April-27, 04:20, said:
While it's great idea in precision you can't do that in polish club because 1D is 5+cards there (or 4 in rare cases of 4-4-4-1 or 5-4 minors).
You could put (3-4)-1-5 hands in 1C but adding (1-4)-3-5 would ruin the system.
I play a fair amount of WJ05, which deviates from traditional polish club, by opening 1
♦ with any hand(12-14) with 4 cards in
♦ and no 5 card major.
I never really understood, why 1
♦ should show 5+ cards, in particular when everybody admits to not so rare exceptions anyway.
(4
♦s-5
♣s, occurs about twice as often as (1-4)-3-5)
Accordingly I have put (1-4)-3-5 into 1
♦ and had never any problem with them. Partner assumes you have 4 cards in diamonds when you open 1
♦, because these precise distributions 1=4=3=5 and 4=1=3=5 occur quite infrequently (about one in 25 hands you open 1
♦).
The fact that you have one diamond less than expected, is at least partially compensated by the good ruffing value these distributions provide.
That a missing diamond card could cause me potential trouble (I never had one) is nowhere a match to the risk that my potential major suit fit might get lost by opening 2
♣ with these hands(1-4)-3-5. (Missing potential major suit fits after 2
♣ is a serious defect, for example when partner is not strong enough to respond to 2
♣, where any bid but a raise promises at least invitational values)
Even if I played traditional polish club, putting (1-4)-3-5 into 1
♦ seems to me not that much of a distortion, given that you open 1-4-4-4 also with 1
♦, though I agree having 3 diamonds instead of five would cause trouble and since traditional polish club opens infrequently 1
♦, a higher proportion of 1
♦ openings would have this distribution. It seems to me that traditional polish club makes 1
♦ precise at the expense of overloading 1
♣ and 2
♣.
I agree that you can not put (1-4)-3-5 into 1
♣ without changing the philosophy of the entire system.
Rainer Herrmann