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What annoyed me about this post was that Liversidge was told "afterwards by one player that he was lucky because he didn't follow best practice..."
I do normally read everyone's posts thoroughly before replying, but in this instance speed read them. Thanks Alex (Slothy) for agreeing with me, and for mike777 at least being honest (and making me laugh with 'Houston we may have a problem')and mentioning he doesn't know Acol. And yes, gwnn, I appreciate your input and recognise that many Dutch players play Acol regularly. And, for everyone else's comments, it's a bridge democracy and everyone is entitled to their view
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For those who don't know, Acol is that old-worldly 4-card system that us Brits and many nationalities still play, but it is a tidy little system that has been thoroughly usurped by the reign of 5-card majors - and I fully understand why 5-card majors are deemed so important. However...
...it follows the principles of length before strength, and bidding 4 card suits up the line. It is quite specific how you bid different-shaped hands. And it also allows you to respond at the 2 level in a minor to a major suit 1 level opening with as little as 8 HCPs and a 4 card suit. The bidding is designed to find a fit, whether it be major or minor at the lowest level.
By the way - and I will have a little rant about this - players who say they play Acol with 5 card majors AREN'T technically playing Acol. They may be playing a weird hybrid of Standard American and Acol, but it ain't true Acol.
But the point of my post is that it may be old-fashioned to open 1♣ with Liversidge's hand, but Jimmy Cayne's team who play 2/1 always seem to do so. And his system has been tweaked and tweaked until it is virtually watertight. And who is on his BBO team: Benito Garozzo, Michael Seamon, Dano di Falco, Thomas Bessis, Cedric Lorenzini and others. So, if they, with their 5 card major opening bids, open 1♣ with Liversidge's illustrated hand, who are we - including me - to argue?
And yes, the opponents can make life difficult if you open 1♣ but that's life. The interesting thing about Liversidge's hand is that (as far as I can see) nobody has evaluated it with a Kaplan and Rubens count. To me it looks a bit better than a standard 14 count. So opening 1♠ is borderline, with a possible high reverse of 3♣ on the next round, or a more conservative 2♣ if partner responds 1NT.
Another can of worms...maybe I should go fishing
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