awm, on 2021-December-24, 03:12, said:
The 1♦ bid seems under-utilised to me, and you'll probably get some bad results in competitive sequences when 1M happens to be 4441. I'd have to see more examples of the 2M openings (which seem like they could just be too high on some misfitting hands), and the lack of any way to bid weak major one-suiters (no room for weak two bids nor for multi) seems concerning. The losses in these cases are hard to calculate (because they are all in competitive auctions) but seem to be significant anecdotally.
As Ulf's current, regular partner at NABC's, I have to say that, when he first presented this opening structure to me, that I had a virtually identical reaction to yours. I was very concerned about the 4441s being included in the unbal 1M openers because when I was certain that there was no chance of recovery when competitive auctions caused us to end up in the 4-3. My concern was based upon my experience with a specific opening bid in standard, natural systems: 1
♦ showing 4+ unless 4=4=3=2 with both majors. Practically speaking, responder assumes that opener has 4+
♦, but when that 4% chance of 4=4=3=2 arises, it has nearly always been a very poor result for us. That being said, the one hand that was going to be an outright disaster for us arose on the final day of the 3-day Swiss at the 2019 Las Vegas NABC. Keep in mind that we were behind screens and I was with "E" (my RHO). My hand was:
and the auction had gone (I do not recall the exact vulnerability other than knowing we were not unfavorable, and spots are approximate):
I had bid 4S based on a combination of the opponent's table action and bidding logic:
i) LHO almost certainly has 5+
♥ given 3
♥ bid rather than X of 2
♥, and
ii) RHO raised to 4
♥ with almost no pause for thought, so I was certain he had 4+
♥
As I was virtually certain Ulf had 0-1
♥, I did not need much for 4
♠ to be a desirable bid. After I made that bid, my LHO doubled, which came back around to me. What happened next was based mostly upon knowledge of my partner's style to compete to 3
♠ with either a 5/5 hand or any hand with 6
♠, and a little help with both opponent's pace as well. Given partner's tendency, I could reduce his distribution to one of 5=1=(43) or 4=1=4=4. With that knowledge, I was now confident that it was very unlikely to be worse than break-even to run to 5
♣, and was certain that it was when I tell you my perception of the timing of my LHO's subsequent X of it was one of the fastest X's I've ever seen - with or without screens (and he was on the other side). It truly felt like he had doubled before I had bid 4
♠ and, that my RHO passed, again without thought. So, I ran to 5
♣ and the opponents now successfully judged to sacrifice. LHO had doubled my 4
♠ bid with 5-5 in the majors including QJTxx of spades, and my partner's hand was:
I don't find fault with my LHO's X of 4
♠ - I don't recall having ever seen an opponent run from on an auction like ours (and no, I did not have a C transfer available the first time meaning I would not be guaranteed of being able to show a spade fit).
I had suggested if were going to include 4441's in the 1M opening, that perhaps we should play 2M as showing 5*M-4+m and 1M as either: 6+M, 5+/4+ majors, or 4*M-5+m so that we could basically assume it was 4, but Ulf declined. He stressed the practical success of the canapé 2M openers. I would say they work so well in practice because:
i) Given that we have to go to the 3-level if we prefer to play partner's minor, its nice that it will also be opener's longer suit, and
ii) Gives you the benefit of the canapé 1M opener, but without the drawback of not knowing if partner's 1M is "normal" or canapé.
I think my favorite hand was when he opened 2
♥ at favorable vulnerability, and I held
♥AKQxx and no other HCP. Was an easy 4
♥ bid and we froze them out of 4
♠ by preventing RHO's normal 1
♠ overcall.
I was also worried that the 1
♦ opening was not being adequately utilized since it was defined as specifically 11-13/14 BAL. In one of the earlier iterations, our opening structure included a 2
♣ opening showing 10-14 and 6+ cards in EITHER minor, and 2
♦ showing 5+/4+ either way in the minors. I was not comfortable with this approach, and suggested keeping 1
♦ as balanced but expanding the range, and playing an artifical 1NT, possibly as being the bid to show both minors. Really, I wanted to get rid of the multi 2
♣ opener. However, I have to agree with Ulf's opinion on the value of this definition for the 1
♦ opening. We all love opening 1NT, and that's what this is: a surrogate for a weak 1NT opening. I have now come to find it somewhat amusing that I criticized this "under-utilization" of 1
♦ when I also agreed with the generally-agreed-upon position that the nebulous 1
♦ opening is one of the worst aspects of the most commonly used strong 1
♣ systems. Not only does the use of 1
♦ as a weak NT lead to many brief auctions, but also puts responder in excellent position on many competitive hands.