whereagles, on Dec 7 2004, 11:48 AM, said:
Ok, I have a question or two.
1. Why is it that
1NT 2C
2D 2NT
is now an invitation, instead of the original forcing relay? Doesn't this defeat the one of the purposes of the original keri, which was to know when to play 3NT instead of 4M? I mean you could bid a strong major suit (HHxxx) via the 2NT relay, to find out if opener had a 4333, so that you could play 3NT in that case. With a weakish major (Hxxxx or worse), you'd transfer and bid 3NT, so that opener would decide to pass or correct, in full knowledge responder had a bad suit. You can't do this trick anymore in the new keri.
2. Dropping the 2NT relay also overloaded the 1NT-2S sequence. Opener can no longer say if he's min or max, and the 1-suiter hands have to go beyond the 3-level more often to ask for aces.
All this gives me the impression that revised keri is more like "beginner's keri", given it's simpler to memorize than the book version, but also less precise. Is this impression correct?
Because opener bids 2M over 1NT:2C with a 5-card suit and a minimum, it makes sense to start with 2C on balanced invitational hands, so that you can play 2M rather than 2NT when opener has a 5-card suit. So 1NT:2C,2D:2NT is now non-forcing. That does mean you have a little less space overall, so this is
not a change you'd want to make if you don't open 1NT with a 5-card major.
There are still two ways of bidding GF 5M332 hands. With a strong major, you use the new game-forcing stayman. With a weak major you transfer then bid 2NT (unlike in the book version, this doesn't promise a 4-card minor); if partner now shows 3-card support there's still room to investigate playing in 3NT.
The nicest thing about the revised version of Keri is using transfer-then-3NT to show a 4-card suit and a 4432 hand (one 4-card major and one 4-card minor). This is worth playing even if you're not convinced by the other changes, as it gives away as little information as possible about opener's hand.