TWO4BRIDGE, on 2011-June-08, 07:43, said:
I think the 2♠! call ( as suggested by others ) by North would cover this option .... if indeed South has a 5 card ♦ suit.
But what if South is 4-4 in the minors ?
K x x x
x
A Q J x
Q 10 x x
The 2
♠ option does not cover the situation as well, because it muddies the waters. One call that says all is always better than a call that leaves ambiguity.
The sequence is easy with an unbalanced diamond, where the 1NT rebid promises a stiff heart, making it a true and obvious Bluhmer. The empathetic splinter concept is different from a Bluhmer in that the stiff is possible but unknown.
The question of 4-4 minors is a legitimate one. However, thinking this through solves the problem. Responder should not make the empathetic splinter (IMO) without 3
♦/4+
♣ or 4+
♦. Translated, Responder either has a sure diamond fit (4+) or a probably diamond fit (3) with a club backup (4+). Thus, if Opener has the 4144 hand, we have a fit in one of the minors. The problem hand for Responder would be only three diamonds and only three clubs. Maybe 3433. With that hand, 2
♠ allows Opener to complete his pattern.
Arguably, the Bluhmer should perhaps just promise 4+ diamonds, such that the Bluhmer is not right on this hand. But, I think that is too limiting, myself. With 4+ diamonds, or the 3
♦/4+
♣ holding, Responder knows some minor fit exists when Opener will accept the Bluhmer, such that demanding that a specific minor fit exists seems unnecessary, so long as Opener caters to this either-or.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.