broze, on 2012-October-25, 06:01, said:
Ok, fair enough, but this is a semantic point and I was trying to raise a bridge point. Call it what you like - is it playable to double and bid 2♣ when p responds 1♠ without necessarily showing extras? Of course I play ELC doubles usually and was clearly aware that a double here might be unusual, hence the forum topic.
It is frustrating when on trying to start a discussion on bridge someone focuses on my misinterpretation of a technical term and ignores the rest of the post. Sorry if you found it to be a stupid question...
Basically it would be tough to play that you can double here because it will make competitive auctions difficult. For instance, something like 1D X 3D, you want partner to be able to bid 3S/4S when reasonable, but his hand might not be well suited for a correction to 4C/5C.
When your hand is not strong enough to control the auction if partner bids the suit you don't like, then that can get you into trouble. The idea behind ELC is basically that clubs don't matter and are already quite suspect anyways, so partner is unlikely to go crazy in clubs and if he bids them at a low level, then correcting to the same level will be fine. You lose some on your strong diamond 1 suiters but you gain in your ability to find the other major.
But an unbid major is an important suit that you will want partner to bid frequently in contested auctions, after all the main point of a takeout double is generally to get to your major suit fits.
It is standard to overcall 2C with your example hand, you have not necessarily missed hearts yet, you can bid them over a cuebid, or over a responsive X from partner, etc. But yeah there are some hands where you get blown out or partner passes 2C with a stiff club and 5 hearts and a mediocre hand, those suck. Raptor is a fix but as with all fixes, introduces new problems (like when you have a strong NT hand type).
Sorry if my first post was focused on semantics I thought you were wondering if by playing ELC it applied to this auction.