Stephen Tu, on 2017-May-12, 15:35, said:
Ship-shape for what purpose? How is that 1 QT going to help you bid more accurately? What superior contract are you going to reach by passing, or which worse contract are you going to avoid by passing, that is going to gain you matchpoints or gain you IMPS?
You are advocating having a QT just for the purpose of having a QT. You haven't explained how this is going to lead you to a better result in the end. Are you just going to pass throughout? Are you planning on showing a 2 suiter? What if it's at 3♠ or 4♠ already when it comes back around?
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Good offense favors bidding over passing. Bidding right away causes the opponents more problems usually than passing and giving them an unobstructed first round.
Having the QT requirement prevents you from jamming the opponents, and you haven't demonstrated at all how it would let partner make more accurate decisions.
Josh's article highlights our competing concerns.
"Preempting has proven too effective a tactic to limit to the ‘traditional’ hands. So, in exchange for the gain of added frequency, we pay the price of decreased precision in describing our hand."
In Bridge, you can either have "bidding accuracy" or a "higher frequency of opens". You can't have both and if you could, that book would have sold out a long time ago and we could all be Bridge Masters ruling the game.
The auction board is full of promises by various parties. What I want from my partner is honesty and "representational faithfulness". By that, I mean I want to know my partner's bid means what it says and that my partner's hand, shape, and features aligns with my initial expectations. I want a partner that keeps his promise (bid). It is important that partnerships minimize "expectations gaps" to maintain harmony and also to negotiate a final contract that is tenable and suitable.
When a partner makes an unconventional opening bid that is rife with surprises, he may succeed in opening 1st, but now the respondent has to "unpack" this "promise" and figure out how many, if any, inconsistencies his partner's hand contains. He must do this before deciding where to place the team's contract next. This adds additional risk for interpretation error and we should not downplay how difficult it is to mitigate this risk.
- Has someone ever made a promise to you and then you were unpleasantly surprised when their actions didn't align with the promises they initially made?
- How did you feel about the person who made a promise they couldn't keep?
- How did that affect your ability to trust them in the future?
Bridge is all about managing relationships and expectations. If you are violating "unwritten" rules and guidelines and breaking promises in the auction bidding, you are planting some seeds that will bear very strange, bitter fruit for the partnership.
Just a few things to think about. . . from the other side of the table.
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I gather from your posts that you are more concerned about the team's opening frequency and jamming up the opponents before they jam us up. That is a nice goal and consistent with a zero-sum game mentality, but that is not my primary concern. My primary tactical concern is "bidding accuracy" and "representational faithfulness". If we get this primary goal right, I believe we can accomplish my secondary tactical concern which is jamming up the opponents. To me, jamming them up is my bonus not my purpose.
Let me be clear, my concern is not more valid/important than yours.
It just means we have competing objectives, strategies, and game plans for our bridge play and our partnership agreements. In my view, a call of PASS doesn't mean that the opponents have won the war. It just means that you have a distributional 5 HCP hand that doesn't conform to our agreed-upon definitions of a 1 of a suit open or a standard, plain vanilla weak 2 open. So to me, PASS, is the best call that describes your hand 1st round.
But I get it, you want to open 1st and that is your wheelhouse.
It took me a while to see what was going on here. That is why BBO needs to add some survey questions that we can answer and display because partnership harmony is very important for the bridge game and some partners may have different objectives as can be seen here.