ahydra, on 2016-March-09, 09:32, said:
Suppose you have a 2344 weak NT, no stop in hearts. You're playing a strong NT system and it goes
1C/1D (whichever you open)-(2H)-2S-p
What is the correct bid here?
The reason I'm asking is because partner and I are thinking of switching from weak NT to strong, and it'd be a good idea to get niggles like this sorted out before staring to play it
![:)](http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
I've seen some strong club systems use the cuebid (3H) as a "help me please partner" bid in situations like this, but that could get you awfully high when partner, holding an invitational hand, still has no idea whether you have enough for game or not. Is some sort of artificial 2NT needed?
Thanks,
ahydra
This is the main argument people make for oepning 1
♦ with 4-4 in the minors.
If you open 1
♣ you are forced to bid 2NT, relying on that RHO has not raised and preemptor rarely has a solid suit.
This scenario is essentially an advertisement for negative free bids at the two level.
A negative free bid is not weak but constructive with a good suit, but it is not forcing.
Nine times out of ten people make the same suit bid with the same hand whether they play 2
♠ forcing here or not.
Only the negative free bidders are in a much more comfortable position, while others get too high.
The forcing 2
♠ frequently hold a hand where they have to choose between overbidding (forcing their partner) or getting stolen blind, if they pass or negative double.
When responder has a truly game forcing hand playing negative double he either jumps to 3
♠ which is strong with a good six card suit or doubles and bids spades later, which shows a game forcing hand with a 5 card suit or six mediocre spades.
The scenario that you might get preempted (LHO jump raises preemptor to a high level) when responder has a game forcing hand almost never happens in practice.
Rainer Herrmann