ArtK78, on 2014-October-07, 13:54, said:
Mike:
What call would you have made on the previous round "to involve partner?" 3♥? How is that more descriptive than 3♦? You didn't make a negative double, so you don't have a spade suit. You showed game forcing values and a diamond suit. Would 3♥ really have been a better call? Is the QJ9x of clubs the most important aspect of your hand?
As for passing 3NT, it seems that partner has a balanced minimum with major suit values. So this could be our last making spot. If opener has heart cards and a spade stop, he can't afford to pass, as I might not have anything in the majors and I will take us beyond 3NT. If partner had slam suitable values - controls in the majors, good clubs - he could pass 3♠ or bid 4♣ (or 4♦). 3NT sounds like he is putting on the brakes.
The previous round wasn't over 2
♥. On the previous round I would have bid 4
♣ over 3N.
As for 3N, I disagree that this shows a weak 1N type of hand. With that, we pass.
As for partner taking us past 3N, if we pass as opener over 3
♠...sorry, but you are on some planet a long way from where I am.
That may be because it is me who has left reality far behind, of course. I don't claim infallibility.
However, if you accept that weak notrump hands with both majors should pass (and I know you don't but bear with me) then responder will usually reopen with a double. Indeed, there are only a few hand-types on which he shouldn't reopen with a double, and every one of those hands is one on which he would pull a 3N bid based on a weak notrump hand. That isn't to say that he will never double and pull, just that he will always double if he wants you to bid 3N with a balanced notrump with both majors stopped. He may then, for example, bid a quantitative 4N, or pull to a minor, strongly slamming, etc.
This approach means that one can always pass here with a weak notrump, allowing 3N to be value-showing.
What action would you take over 3
♠ with KJx KQx x AKxxxx, btw?
Pass and then over double?
And of course, if 3N shows a weak 1N, pass shows something else, and now responder's choices will be impacted. He won't double to protect against the weak notrump hand with both majors, because opener will have denied that hand.
Thus, one cannot answer the OP question without an assumption as to 3N. I suspect that most would play it the way you do but, and I mean no disrespect to you at all, I see that as simply bad bridge.
I confess that I would never have this problem in any of my regular expert partnerships because I usually play a weak 1N opener....now 3N would definitely include a 15-17 balanced along with my 3=3=1=6 example.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari