dustinst22, on 2014-August-28, 16:26, said:
Are you really using antecdotal hands to justify a convention. I think many methods can get you to slam here, but that's not the point -- cherry picking hands to "illustrate" why a convention is useful is about the worst way imaginable.
I do not mind if people illustrate their clever methods by example, which of course can not prove much but can make you think and it may help you understand the method better.
Unfortunately this example does not illustrate much. .
gnasher, on 2014-August-29, 00:50, said:
One of the disadvantages of conventions like Bergen is that people spend their time thinking about how clever their methods are, rather than about what their hand is actually worth. The South hand is easily worth an invitational raise, so standard bidders should have no problem with this.
People playing unsophisticated standard methods might have a problem if South had Kxxx Kxxx xx Qxx, but as others have said it's possible to solve this problem without using up all your three-level responses.
Agreed.
But show me the Bridge player who does not think he is playing clever methods. Are you an exception? This is not confined to people using Bergen.
I guess those who did not reach slam mostly did not value the responding hand properly and in a club game a good distributional slam is missed by the majority is the rule rather than the exception.
Bergen does of course use up all three-level responses.
I do not mind playing them, since the proposed alternatives are not that useful either or occur that infrequently that I can not be bothered.
Differentiating between different types of raises makes sense to me and it occurs frequently. Since Bergen shows a major suit fit the jump does not preempt partner, one reason I am not so fond of invitational jump shifts.
In standard the single raise covers too wide a range (leading to missed games or unsuccessful attempts) and Bergen takes at least some hands out of the single raise.
As others have pointed out the advantage of Bergen is its combination of obstructive and constructive value
Rainer Herrmann
5D = 1 key card