gszes, on 2012-January-12, 17:49, said:
P heard your 1n bid and passed over 2s dont compete
to 2n it is bidding the same values twice. At least
using x will be a ton more flexible. If you dont
feel the hand is good enough for an x pass
I don't agree with this. The 1NT bid has a very wide range (probably 5-11 or something) and can be bid on a variety of spade suits. As for flexibility, IMO a double is extremely inflexible. For all partner knows, you are doubling on a spade stack with few outside values. After all, you are doubling 2
♠ for penalty sitting in front of someone who opened and rebid spades! I think he pretty much has to pass.
dake50, on 2012-January-13, 09:20, said:
Having not jumped to 2N last round to assure my partner
S-stops and 10-12, I've fixed myself.
...
Some people love doing this sort of bidding, so they
allow something wrong to criticize partner.
Strongly disagree with this. I think jumping to 2NT at matchpoints is bad; I really don't want to go down inviting on a balanced 10-count.
whereagles, on 2012-January-13, 10:59, said:
Just pass. RHO is broke, so it's pretty good odds we're making 2 trump tricks.
Dbl (if penalty) also comes to mind, especially if I'm in need of a top.
Maybe.. but if we're making 8 tricks in NT or 9 tricks in diamonds then we'll probably get a bad score defending a white 2S.
gnasher, on 2012-January-13, 11:09, said:
In most such auctions I'd play 2NT as scrambling, but here it seems unlikely that I'd want to bid that. Partner made a takeout double of 1♠, primarily showing interest in playing in one of the other suits. If I had 4-4 in the minors and a hand that preferred 3m to defending 2♠, I wouldn't have bid 1NT.
On the other hand, I can't think of a hand where I'd want to bid 2NT naturally either. With a maximum and a source of tricks I would have bid my source of tricks on the previous round; with a maximum and no source of tricks, I would double.
Hence I don't think 2NT exists.
I tend to agree that a scrambling 2NT is less useful here, and I think it can be useful as a natural bid, or at least a 2-way bid. Take the example hand - this spade suit will probably produce two stoppers in notrump. It might produce zero tricks in spades. The opps are not vul, so defending is less desirable, and in a close low-level contract I'd definitely prefer to declare anyway. I actually think that 2NT is the most flexible call. If partner has a good hand for notrump (Hx in spades for example) he can pass, and if he has a really good hand he can bid 3NT. If he has something like a minimum 1444 he can pull to 3
♣ and let you place the contract.