jillybean, on 2021-March-02, 13:06, said:
I would like another option '2♣ is obvious but I want to bid 3♣'
Suppress that desire!
This is, imo, an extremely important point for advancing players to internalize. You are NOT responsible for all the decisions in your partnership.
By bidding 3C you are making the unilateral decision that your combined hands belong in game. You have zero reason to think that that is the case. You have ample reason to hope that that is the case, but those terms...think and hope...are not identical in meaning.
Yes, bidding 2C will once in a while result in a missed game, but will not, by contrast, result in reaching a hopeless game or slam. Remember: partner is an equal participant in the auction.
Show a hand that is strong enough to force to game opposite an average 6 count, and pity poor partner who holds either a misfitting 6 count or a good hand, where she ought to be able to drive to slam with confidence, only to be disappointed, and turn an easy game into a losing slam.
Standard, including 2/1, methods have seams...hands where your choices are going to be difficult. You cannot get around those problems by consistently overbidding or insisting that you and you alone are the partner responsible for these decisions.
In 2/1 you have a 2C rebid. You don't like it, nor should you like it, but it's what you have decided, in common with partner, to play. Want to avoid this?
Play a forcing club or adopt a Gazilli like 2C rebid. Don't try to avoid it by lying to partner about the strength of your hand.
I remember a hand many years ago, in the last round of the round-robin stage of the CNTC. My team was playing the team with which we were tied for the last playoff spot (back then, only 4 teams advanced, now it is 8).
RHO opened, LHO responded, and RHO (the weaker of the two opps) jumpshifted on a mediocre 18 count with shortness in responder's suit. They reached a no-play vulnerable game, 6 imps out of the window for no good reason. LHO was not happy and told partner words to the effect of 'just rebid 2C...if I pass, we're almost never missing a game'
That's the advice I give you here. Bid 2C.
If partner passes, you may miss a game but the odds are against it.
If you bid 2C and have missed an easy game, take a look at partner's hand. While some misses are inevitable, my expectation would be that partner probably have some call other than pass available. I've previously discussed false preferences: they are an important tool when one plays that opener's jumpshift is gf, and thus a simple change of suit could be on as much as a bad 18 count.
Over 2C, responder should preference to 2H with, say, Axxx xx Qxxx Kxx. Btw, I'm not at all sure what game you hope to make opposite that 9 count!
But you can then bid 3C to show a near jumpshift with 5-5 in your suits....
Imagine, instead, that he has QJxxx x Kxxx xxx.
Over your 3C (if you jumpshift) you're forced to game. Good luck.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari