mikeh, on 2014-August-25, 10:58, said:
I frankly couldn't understand the question well enough to answer, at least not in any committal way.
Wouldn't everyone want to know the actual holding we have before answering the question? I mean, if they open 1♣ I might, according to the poll, hold AQxx AQxx KJx 10x, and who in their right mind would bid 1N?
Or they might open 1♦ and I hold xxxx AQxx AKJ Qx, and now 1N looks pretty reasonable. I don't see how a poll answer can address these issues in a meaningful way.
I can answer about their opening a major...I would strain to bid 1N with 4=4=3=2 or 4=4=2=3 and suitable strength, honours.....a double based on having 4 cards in only one side suit, and a doubleton in another, strikes me as very poor.
Well, in your first example hand, you do not hold Hx in the opened suit, so I agree that overcalling on that hand would be ridiculous. Hence it was excluded from the conditions of the poll
In the second of your examples, your doubleton is not in the opponent's suit, and again I would expect that everyone and his dog would overcall 1N. Again, hence it was excluded from the conditions of the poll, which was that your doubleton was in the opponent's suit but that it was guarded.
If those conditions are not sufficient for you to commit either to 1N on X on hands that fulfil the poll criteria, ie your choice would depend on further unstated conditions, then you are asked to vote for neither extreme option but the one which will most frequently be satisfied.
Or not vote at all, of course. It is not compulsory.
I could have phrased the poll in a more complex way that catered for other conditions but I thought it sensible to stick to simple. If you think that roughly half the time (within the conditions stated, ie that your doubleton was in the opponent's suit, but guarded) you would open 1N, and the other half X, then either you can post in the thread the types of criteria which would decide the issue or you can leave me guessing. And I am pretty good at guessing.
What I am getting at is that with a 4432 shape you have a balanced hand.
If you also have a guard in the opponent's suit, AND the values for a 1N overcall, there are some attractions to bidding 1N. "Get it off your chest" etc. If partner is interested in major suit fits there is room to investigate.
But if the hand also has properties similar to a 3-suited takeout (fewer than 3 cards in the oppo suit and at least 3 in all the others) there is a conflicting desire to get that description across.
All that I am trying to ascertain is which desire takes priority - the 3-suited takeout or the balanced hand in range with a guard.
I have come across a lot of good players fairly entrenched in their views but without a clear agreement between them on the matter.
Psych (pron. saik): A gross and deliberate misstatement of honour strength and/or suit length. Expressly permitted under Law 73E but forbidden contrary to that law by Acol club tourneys.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. m
s
t
r-m
nd
ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq