Posted 2013-November-22, 10:57
I recently analyzed an aspect of bidding theory/thinking that seemed incredibly basic and perhaps pointless expect as a way of understanding why certain bids mean certain things. In the context I gave, a fair analysis might have been, "Sure, but how useful is that to know?" This auction, however, makes me think that the concepts were more valuable than I though.
The most basic point of the thing was that there is a strong reason for a change of level bid in a major to show a 5-card suit but that a non-change of level only promises a four-card suit. This works well at the one-level and is fairly obvious. At the three-level, this is tough to apply. But, if the start is at the two-level, this principle seems to have good application.
I also consider Walsh good thinking.
This is a unique auction for me, because I would like Kokish here, or "Rexfordized Kokish" perhaps (see my blog), so I do not usually have natural auctions here. But, consider two alternatives:
Alternative A: Responder needs a 5-card spade suit to introduce them directly after Opener's 2♥. The downsides to this are that (1) a 4-4 spade fit is not discovered until this problem emerges, and (2) there is no convenient way to raise either minor by Responder below 3NT. The upside is that a 5-3 spade fit can be found more rapidly.
Alternative B: Responder introduces a 4-card spade suit if he has one directly over Opener's 2♥, even with a longer minor. The downside is that a 5-3 spade fit takes more time to spot and that Opener often will need to make a waiting 2NT call next to see if there is some minor worth mentioning or a spade suit worth repeating, and some ambiguity might arise. The upsides are that (1) a 4-4 spade fit is found rapidly and easily, and (2) this enables a convenient way to agree the minor below 3NT (Opener bids 3♠ artificially).
My "Rexfordized Kokish" solves all problems best, IMO, but the alternative of allowing a 2♠ call with 4+ seems decent and better than Alternative A to me.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.