Cyberyeti, on 2021-September-03, 04:56, said:
How do you bid after 2♣-2♠-3♠ ? The auction is already really cramped ?
We would start 2♣-2N-3♠ if we opened 2♣ so not much better off, but at least we know partner has a hand that is 9+ and the auction is F4N.
Yes, it is. This is not the system I prefer over 2
♣. I also think showing 3 controls opposite a 2
♣ opening should perhaps force to at least 4NT. But this is exactly the tradeoff when opening 2
♣ - your auction will be cramped and annoying, but at least you're getting to game opposite ~3 points and partner will try for slam on a modest 8 or so.
mikl_plkcc, on 2021-September-03, 05:32, said:
If I bid 3♠ in the second round, it will likely go 2♣ - 2♠ - 3♠ - 4♦ - 6NT. I admit this is better now and my "bridge judgement" is lacking after a few years of absence in the game.
If I swap diamonds and spades, it is still a solid 2♣ opener here. Opening a 1♦ massively understates the hand and will probably be responded with a 3NT to play directly by the partner, and opening any NT is just a blatant lie on the shape.
Showing a very strong (19+) NT with a singleton honour is very often the smallest lie, and is quite a popular decision. I'm not sure why you and your partner are trying to jump so much - first with 6
♠, now with 6NT, and next with 3NT on some alternative auction after flipping suits. If you are in a force try to keep the bidding low and make maximum use of your bidding space. I don't know if you had ways to show two-suiters over 2
♣ earlier, if so 4
♥ now ought to show a control for diamond slam. But if not- partner has already shown controls with 2
♠, what would 4NT be? Maybe something good, such as forcing with support for diamonds?