Winstonm, on 2018-October-06, 09:00, said:
No. If I got to 4H and was allowed to play there I would consider it a win.
I used to have a partner who over 1C-1S would have shrugged (visibly) and bid 4H.
Not very ethical or refined, but I miss him at times
HardVector, on 2018-October-06, 12:04, said:
I wouldn't have opened the north hand in clubs, it's not strong enough for a reverse and if partner bids the wrong thing you have rebid problems. Considering that 1c was opened, then freely bid 4d, I'd expect a really big hand in the north. I'd be wondering if 6 was enough. I'd spend a bit of time deciding between 6 and 7. The spade void is huge.
Clubs is the longer suit and being able to show that with second bid could be vital in a competitive bidding situation, as it indeed turned out to be. No rebid problem in our system if the auction is uncontested: raise a response of 1D (which might be clubs), bid 1NT over 1M (XYZ follows), bid 2D over a 2C game force.
I felt a free bid of 4D was legitimate in the competitive circumstances, and yes it should get south thinking. But he is often more realistic than me, in particular about what the rest of the room will be in.
The_Badger, on 2018-October-06, 12:39, said:
I'm not fond of opening 1NT with 2245 and two major suit doubletons and open suits, but that North hand is a pretty solid 15 points (K&R evaluates it as 17!). It's a lie to reverse with such a hand (or bid 4♦ as in the actual auction) but it's sort of acceptable as a 1NT opener.
Whether you get to slam opening 1NT instead of 1♣ is another matter...
With this agreement I could not open that hand 1NT. With my main partner yes, and I would have been tempted despite the risks. He would have transferred in Rubensohl, but if the interference continued he would have reached 5H knowing only that I held an even number of keycards and strong 4-5 minors - even assigning the spades Ace to opponents slam is far from sure.