First things first:
I need to type out the name of my new convention in full, “Lee Two Diamonds.” Why in full? So that it can be picked up in a Google search. The short name is “Lee 2
♦.”
Now to your post –
Zelandakh, on 2014-February-03, 08:00, said:
Just a note to 32519, if the 6-4 majors option is changed from 10-15 to 13+ (with any maximum you like) then it would not be BS. I daresay you could find a way to rearrange the bids in the system to make this so. I do not know if that would make it legal in ZA but it would now match the first Exception (all strong options are a king above average strength and all weak options promise a known suit).
The Rule of Eighteen is a rule employed by the World Bridge Federation to define the boundary between light opening bids and Highly Unusual Methods, known as HUM, in which bad hands are regularly opened. There is a mathematical calculation involved.
Only if the number of High Card Points added to the total of the two longest suits totals 18, is the bid acceptable.
The Rule of Nineteen is a rule employed by the bridge players in England to satisfy the requirements of the World Bridge Federation to define the boundary between light opening bids and Highly Unusual Methods, known as HUM, in which bad hands are regularly opened. There is a mathematical calculation involved.
If the number of High Card Points added to the total of the two longest suits totals 19, the bid is acceptable within the English bridge tournaments. This is just 1 point higher than the lower limit established by the World Bridge Federation, which constitutes The Rule of Eighteen.
My 6-4 in the majors, 10-15 HCP hand pattern option, meets
The Rule of Twenty, and therefore automatically the Rule of Eighteen and the Rule of Nineteen. With 2-1 in the minor suits, I am adding 3 distributional points for the singleton and 1 distributional point for the doubleton, bringing the minimum total hand strength to 14. With 3-0 in the minor suits, I am adding 5 distributional points for the void, bringing the minimum total hand strength to 15.
I cannot see how my 2
♦ bid will ever be outlawed by either the World Bridge Federation of the EBU. If somehow or other it does end up before an appeals committee, a head-to-head comparison with the current Multi can be put forward as part of getting the bid declared legal –
1. Multi has no known anchor suit (the other 3 players at the table are not sure whether opener has
♥ or
♠). With my bid the anchor suit is known to be
♦ 74.8% of the time.
2. Multi with strong options is permitted. Permitting strong options in my 2
♦ bid should be no different.
In short, I can see absolutely no conceivable way that either the WBF or the EBU will outlaw the bid. The USA has already red-carded the current Multi in many instances. I will never in a lifetime even bother trying to get it legalized there.