sfi, on 2013-November-16, 23:14, said:
This hand is IMO one of the big win areas for strong club openings. You can open these good distributional hands at the one level without partner going too crazy, and the opponents frequently misjudge.
Just because you have a higher upper limit in a "standard" system", why does partner need to go crazy when my rebid will show I am nowhere close to such an upper limit?
You either cater for distributional, low HCP openings or you don't.
I have a good six card major, good intermediates, a void and 9 HCP and no rebid problem.
To open this hand is just a matter of hand evaluation and probabilities. I have old books on ACOL (not my favorite system) recommending to open such hands.
Where is the big advantage here for strong clubbers and where is the problem I will have in standard, but not in precision?
If opponents preempt over 1
♠ responder will assume or worry that opener has an ace more in precision just as much as in standard.
Say responder has 14 HCP and a misfit (small singleton spade and at most four hearts with long clubs), just tell me where a precision auction will deviate from a standard one and stop in a nice safe partial.
Just because the quoted statement is repeated time and again does not change nonsense to a valid observation.
Rainer Herrmann