Posted 2016-May-20, 06:10
I do agree that minimum 4441 openers are a bit of a problem, to a greater or lesser extent with any broadly natural system, but I don't think that the OP reasons given really hit the spot. For example if my system is in range for a 1N rebid after a 1S response I do not fear that sequence as being a weakness in opening.
There are two main problems to address:
1) Your fit, if you have one, may be in the fourth suit after three suits have been bid naturally, which may make it hard to bring to light, and
2) Responder may place opener with a 5th card in the suit opened, particularly if he does not rebid NT. While that may not be systemically guaranteed, the assumption may be with the odds and therefore not unreasonable, should an assumption be necessary. If you lack the cards that partner assumes you to hold, that generally would not be a recipe for success.
Passing is of course not without different dangers.
In times past in some partnerships I used to get around this by using 2-level openers to show 4441 shapes. It has long been popular to include them in a multi 2D, but in those days it used to show 17+. Indeed it was considered appropriate that the "strong" options in a multi 2D should be well above normal opening strength, often due to licensing restrictions.
But we used to play (licence permitting), that 2S was a standard weak 2 in Spades, 2H was a 4H441 hand with 12-16 HCP, any singleton other than H, and 2D was a weak 2 in H, or 12-16 count 4-1-4-4, or any singleton 17+ 4441.
This method had a couple of obvious weaknesses:
1) If responder has a partial fit in Hearts and Spade length, but only moderate strength, then opposite a 2H opener there was a temptation to pass in the expectation that opener had a singleton Spade. While that is with the odds, it could fail spectacularly if responder happened to have 4 card Spade support.
2) The other main weakness was that the 2D opener provides the opponents with an easy and effective defence, when it only has one specified major in the weak option.
As against that, the 2H opener is quite difficult to defend against, and likewise interference over 2D is not without risk as the "intermediate" strength range of the 4-1-4-4 increases its frequency, where an opponent with values will normally assume, with the odds in his favour, that the 2D opener contains the weak option. I think that it is for this reason that in low tier events the strong options in the multi had to be very strong, so as to remove from a strong defender that element of doubt.
Anyway, it is has been a long time since I used to play these methods. I think that Roman Smolski used to play that 2H opener in some partnerships.
Psych (pron. saik): A gross and deliberate misstatement of honour strength and/or suit length. Expressly permitted under Law 73E but forbidden contrary to that law by Acol club tourneys.
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Masterminding (pron. m
s
t
r-m
nd
ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
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