RedSpawn, on 2017-March-27, 12:04, said:
Here are the costs of increasing the range of opening bids:
[*]Your team will frequently bully and commandeer the auction with woefully inadequate HCP values. This will subject the partnership to a higher risk of overbids, which your team will routinely blame on "card placement".
Does partner think I have a strong NT hand when I open? One would hope that partner doesn't play you for a Roth-Stone sound opening every time you open.
RedSpawn, on 2017-March-27, 12:04, said:
[*]You will create additional frustration and work for your partner who must now differentiate if your 1 level open is sound or junk. Your partner will have to figure out the new meaning of a 2NT response to a partner's 1 of a suit opening bid because "the opener" reserves the right to open junk material in 1st or 2nd seat.
Well, after a major suit opening, most play Jacoby 2NT so you must be talking about minors. Really, how terrible is it to get to 2NT if responder has 11-12 HCP and you have 13?
RedSpawn, on 2017-March-27, 12:04, said:
[*]Your team will frequently & incorrectly make 3NT gambits with inadequate values because Quick Tricks are not even on your team's radar for opening bid requirements.
Frequently? Gambits? OK, but would you believe that has never ever happened to me?
RedSpawn, on 2017-March-27, 12:04, said:
[*]Your team will began to heavily and unjustifiably rely on poor, novice level defense to make contracts since being 1st to open trumps common sense bidding.
That's a staple of my game, even against good players.
RedSpawn, on 2017-March-27, 12:04, said:
[*]You will eventually create derision and mistrust within your own partnership when you encounter teams that see through the "jedi mind tricks" and successfully employ the penalty double to knock your team out of competition.
Nope, I plan 2 steps ahead. After opening light, I routinely underbid by 2 tricks to even things out.