awm, on 2012-May-07, 12:08, said:
I don't really understand this thread. There are two situations:
1. Not in competition. There isn't a huge difference between reasonable relay schemes. Perhaps you can show otherwise, but there are only so many ways to carve up space. The big gains will cone from well designed relay breaks. Anyway, the one type I'd be concerned about here is double negative because space is at a premium, and 1s is bad for those.
2. Competition. Here the goal is to have responder give useful shape info at first response as much as possible, as this will help more than a point range when 4th hand bids. There should be some bias to hands where competition is most common/dangerous. This last is the semi-positives; generally double negative responder won't have much to say, and a positive means opponents have less (so less likely to bid) and at least gets us to a forcing auction.
The suggestion here seems to lose on both counts...
Thanks for the feedback.
I don't think this design will pan out. Still looking at it.
As far as design goals, I think it's very useful to know immediately whether responder is broke or not before RHO intervenes. For instance, we play Rubensohl after our 1H semipositive response....
1C P 1H (2S)
3H shows 4 hearts and is GF
Opener may venture this because he knows responder has something.
1C P 1H (2S)
dbl says takeout shape and promises no extra.
These things mean we are better placed than after 1C-1D (0-7).
I don't mind so much our 1C-1S (DN) auctions. Again, we're better placed in competition than 1C-1D (0-7) auctions. In uncontested auctions, we've buried our major suit fits, but we've buried the opponents' fits as well and are likely to have only a small point majority on them.
What sucks for us is our 1C-1H uncontested auctions when we only are in part score/game range and opener has an unbalanced pattern.
There's a lot of upside, however, to 1C-1H as semipositive any. For one, opener only relays when he wants to...not has to. He can choose (instead) to rebid 1N (17-18) or Stayman or transfer, etc. Opener can try to sign off, invite, or GF relay. Opener is very well positioned with balanced hands. It's the unbalanced hands that are problematic.
So this thread was aimed to see if we could have opener start to describe his hand naturally at a lower level. The biggest snag so far that I've encountered is when opener has a big balanced hand.