Zelandakh, on 2024-December-20, 12:58, said:
After a 1♣ opening, I thought the auction 1♣ - 1♥/1♠; 2♠ - 3♣ was obvious and dislike all of the proposed alternatives.
I think this is already assuming way too much. How often is 2
♠ on a three card suit in your system? Does 3
♣ promise a fifth spade (well, clearly not if the bid is obvious to you, but which of opener's rebids then confirm a 4-4 spade fit and which ones show that we only have a 4-3 fit)?
I'm a bit disappointed that people are so committed to the same plan. I was hoping to raise some discussion. In my opinion, when partner opens 1
♣ (even if it can be 2), we should evaluate our hand as a slam try. Too strong for a simple game force, not strong enough for a slam force. I think 6
♣ will regularly play better than 6
♠, even if we have a 4-4 fit. Normally you want to be in the 4-4 fit to produce red suit ruffs in the short hand. Here we are planning on establishing the clubs regardless, so that plan does not nearly matter as much. What matters more is knowing about partner's number of clubs, general hand strength and slam suitability. We need to tell partner that spade values are worth their weight in gold, extra clubs are really welcome, quick tricks in the red suits are pulling their weight and slow values in the red suits do not. My bidding plan is to show a GF slam try two-suiter with long clubs and shorter spades.
Having evaluated the hand, we can turn to the bidding system. Since I intend to probe in clubs some systems are better off starting with 2
♣ rather than 1
♠ (or a transfer 1
♥, or the likes). Especially at IMP scoring, where 5
♣ rather than 4
♠ (if we even have a spade fit, which is the case here but a priori unlikely). Especially if this inverted minor raise is immediately forcing to game, we could well have a smoother auction on that start. But even without that, there are very clean inverted minor structures that are better.
Conversely, if we do bid 1
♠, if partner doesn't raise we are fine (we likely have some XYNT gadget over 1NT, and the chance that partner shows an unbalanced hand with clubs isn't that high but if that happens we definitely have the tools to set clubs and explore slam). If partner does raise, especially 2
♠, I have a rebid problem. My own continuations here focus on 3NT vs 4
♠, and also on finding the 5-3 or 4-4 fits. It is very difficult to now pivot to clubs, especially if we do happen to have the 4-4 spade fit.
This part is highly system dependent. I was hoping to generate discussion on the relative merits of introducing the spade suit on the first round, especially if we're playing IMPs so 5
♣ need not be a disaster. I think it is common to leap to the major suits - they are more important, after all - but recognising when it's not the best move is interesting.