PhilG007, on 2016-May-10, 01:52, said:
Personally,I've never liked WJO's In my experience they're more of a liability than an asset.
What frequently occurs is that LHO is sitting with the remainder of the suit then the next thing
that happens is "DOUBLE"and then...you can guess the rest (!)
Strong jump overcalls have an obvious advantage -- you can get your suit in, as opposed to starting with a double and having the bidding come back to you at an uncomfortably high level. I would deffo play them if I could rely on getting very good hands most of the time.
But like all bridge players, I am a below-average cardholder
, so on a frequency basis, the SJO doesn't do it for me. Besides, sometimes you can show a two-suited hand, sometimes they won't bump the bidding too much; I have rarely if ever regretted not having a SJO available.
A WJO has quite a few advantages -- it can get a lead, compete the partscore, find a sacrifice, take away a lot of the opponents' bidding space... Plus it comes up. And, of course, while it can be penalised, it is a little harder than in the old days. Because the opponents have learnt that a takeout double is more useful, not least because it is much more frequent. And if they do stop off to double it for a couple off when they had a slam or a vulnerable game on, you are laughing.
An IJO would seem like a happy medium, and some like to play it vul or unfav, but I find it redundant as there is a large overlap between hands suitable for the bid and hands suitable for a simple overcall.
Anyway you call always just call it quits and play Ghestem
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein