awm, on 2013-June-19, 15:37, said:
I'm the opposite of CSGibson here -- strongly prefer to bid my spades. My reasoning:
1. If responder has invite or better you have so much space after three one-bids that it should be easy to reach a good spot regardless of which method you use. The only way it's likely to matter is if you need to play a contract (most often 3nt) from a particular side. Bidding 1S keeps options open while bidding 1NT on what could be xx(x) in the other minor does not.
2. If responder has less than invite, my style allows me to find a 4-4 or 4-3 spade fit. In exchange I will lose some 5-3 minor fits and some 5-2 heart fits. Finding the spade fit might be a game swing and will definitely improve my MP result (when it comes up). Neither of these can be said of the 5-3 minor fits and 5-2 heart fits.
I couldn't disagree more.
I would be interested in some kind of poll in which those who vote one way have ever played the other to a significant extent.
My own suspicion is that virtually all of those who would reserve the 1
♠ rebid for unbalanced or semi-balanced (5422 as the most balanced) have played a lot of up the line bridge before switching and that a significant number of those who reject the 1N rebid on 4432 have little experience playing the other way.
I hope no-one takes offence, because I am not saying that the second faction is 'wrong' nor that there aren't many of them who have tried it both ways and made a considered decision to rebid 1
♠ on 4432 or even 4333.
Here are some of my arguments:
1. Responder's dilemma after 1m 1
♥ 1
♠ when holding some 3=4=3=3 hand, especially when the opening was in clubs. Say you hold some 3433 with no diamond stopper, after a 1
♣ opening, and a poor hand. You can pass 1
♠, I suppose but that should be reserved for really bad hands since opener could still hold up to a poor 18 for his 1
♠ call. If you bid 1N, he is 4=2=2=5 and they run the diamonds and then get something more in the wash..whether you make or go down, you get a poor score because you fare better in clubs. If you bid 2
♣, he has a 4=3=2=4 or for some even a 4333 and you are getting a poor score for playing clubs rather than notrump. We simply NEVER have this problem when the sequence 1
♣ then 1
♠ promises at least 5 clubs.
2. when we have a balanced hand opposite a balanced hand, in 3N, right-siding issues are rarely anything more than the result of random layouts of the cards. I mean, does anyone decide NOT to open a 1N in range merely because they hold a worthless doubleton? No, so why are we so worried about 'right-siding' 3N when opener has notrump shape but is out of range?
3. It is always a good idea to be able to limit common hand types with some degree of precision as early as possible. One reason that most pairs enjoy opening 1N is that they have developed excellent methods which work precisely because responder starts with a fairly good understanding of opener's general hand type. I don't understand why we wouldn't want to get to 1N, as a strength limiting and distribution narrowing call asap whenever we have a balanced hand in range. Don't all good partnerships have excellent methods for moving forward? I would be astounded if the majority of experienced partnerships don't have better tools over a 1N rebid than they do over a 4th suit scenario, even if they use xyz after 1
♠, which has a built in cost in that they can't play 2
♣ when it is right.
4. It is extremely valuable to conceal opener's major holdings if responder is going to raise or even pass 1N. LHO will frequently lead spades. And even if they avoid that lead, counting out declarer's hand will often be a little more challenging than it would be otherwise
5. If responder is passing 1N, 4th chair will be (properly) less likely to balance when he has to fear opener holding 4 spades. So we gain on occasion when 4th chair pulls in a bit and they miss their good 2
♠ contract, and we gain some more on other hands when they do butt in and it turns out that we did hold 4
♠.
6. constructive game and slam auctions in opener's minor are far easier if responder knows at the one-level that they have a good fit/source of tricks. Venturing past 3N when for all one knows, one's fit is 8 cards, is tougher than when one knows that one has a 9 card fit, not to mention the difference in playability between balanced and unbalanced. I'm not saying that 4th suit forcing won't often get you to the same spot, but the more bidding space you take to work out degrees of fit and strength, the less effective your bidding will usually be.
7. We cannot/will not miss a 4-4 spade fit when responder has invitational or better values. Indeed, with 2 way new minor, properly used, we can have very effective auctions after the 1N rebid. I note that adam argues, fairly enough, that there will be borderline hands for responder that will pass 1N but that would invite if assured of the spade fit. I turn this around and point out that these hands will be relatively infrequent when opener is flat and responder is weak. It is FAR more likely that responder can push to invite on lesser hands if responder learns of the spade suit at the 1 level while knowing that opener has shape. Responder can properly value his own shape and honour location far more effectively in those circumstances.
The only negative anyone has ever argued to me is playing 1N when we belong in 2
♠. I remember getting a new, expert partner to reluctantly agree to the bypass method...he was moaning about this as a real matchpoint issue. Very early on in the event he rebid 1N over my 1
♥ response, and I passed despite being 4=4 majors, since I was too weak to invite. He got a spade lead, giving him a trick in our 4-4 fit and a tempo. 1N making 2 with 2
♠ doomed to fail. One hand doesn't prove anything and I readily acknowledge that this is a true flaw...but it isn't exactly a gigantic issue. Even at mps, the 1N bidders will gain on other side-effects more than this flaw costs, and at imps it is even less of a problem, since much of the time the issue is only an overtrick or 110 against 90.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari