dlittmann, on 2018-May-29, 12:52, said:
What do you think responder is supposed to bid with Axxx Kxxx xxx xx or Axxx Kxxxx x xxx in response to 1D?
You seem to be massively confused about how standard bidding works. Responder, with 4-4/4-5/4-6 in the majors, is always supposed to bid 1H first, whether a passed hand or not. He is not expecting to reverse into spades, except, perhaps in the case that opener bids 2nt showing extra values. He only expects to support spades if opener bids 1S or 2S instead of supporting hearts.
How this normally works (if responder is a passed hand, just ignore possibility of responder forcing game unless opener has shown extras) :
- case 1: opener raises 1H to 2H. Responder passes or invites as appropriate. With a min you play 2H. With more, with 4cd spades and 4hearts only, responder might try 2s in case opener's style is to raise with 4351 minimums (some people prefer 1S with this, others prefer 2H), which can uncover the spade fit. Or you just play 3H or 4H, or 2nt/3nt if responder offers and opener is allowed to raise on 3 cd hearts.
- case 2: opener raises 1H to 3H or 4H, or some artificial bid showing a very strong hand with a 4+ cd heart fit. You play in hearts at some level.
- case 3: opener bids 1S. Now you find your spades, opener has 4 spades but not 4H. Responder raises to some level of spades, 2s/3s/4s, or if unpassed hand and slam aspirations may employ 4th suit forcing or xyz to set spades as trumps in a forcing manner.
- case 4: opener bids 1nt. There are two styles here. In style 1, opener denies 4 cd spades. So now you don't have to worry about missing spade fit, you can use gadget to find 5-3 heart fit if have game aspirations. If you are weak you just pass 1nt. In another style, opener always bids 1nt with balanced hands and can still have 4 cd spades. In the other style, if responder is min you miss your 4-4 spade fit, oh well. If responder is stronger, they can use NMF/checkback/xynt/or whatever to find 4-4 spades. In some schemes that allow opener to conceal spades, the sequence 1m-1h-1nt-2s shows specifically 4-4 and invitational values, nf (so worst case opener rebids 2nt, with invitational values hopefully this is still making).
- case 5: opener rebids or jump rebids his suit: opener denies spades so you no longer worry about finding 4-4 fit.
- case 6: opener rebids in a lower ranking suit (1d-1h-2c): opener denies spades, with a min you pass or preference to 2d, or 2H with 4-6, again you don't worry about finding spades.
- case 7: opener reverses (1c-1h-2d): again opener denies spades so you don't worry about 4-4 spade fit.
- case 8: opener rebids 2nt. In most styles this does NOT deny 4 cd spades. So here, and only here, by agreement will a weak responder (but strong enough for game opposite 18-19, i.e. 7 count or so) bid 3S to find a 4-4 spade fit. You have to differentiate between 4=5 in the majors and 4=4 in the majors. It's arbitrary, usually one of these bids 1d-1h-2nt-3s, while the other bids 1d-1h-2nt-(3c/3d, whichever is used as an artificial checkback for major fits).
- case 9: opener jump shifts into spades, showing spades and a GF, and unbalanced, responder raise spades and off you go.
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Reverse by responder only promises 13+ (or in a few specific cases, inv+) values if opener can be MINIMUM. Opener who rebid 2nt relieves responder of that necessity.
You also don't need opening values to reverse if opener jumps in his own suit showing extras; i.e. 1c-1h-3c-3s, you might bid this way with 9/10+ and no stop in diamonds, hoping for opener to bid 3nt with diamonds stopped, else might support hearts or rebid clubs, after which you will decide what the next best move is.
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You have sequences confused. You shouldn't reverse as responder (e.g. 1d-1h-2d-2s) with minimum values if opener can be MINIMUM, rebidding their suit cheaply, rebidding 1nt, bidding a new suit at the 1 level, rebidding in a lower ranking suit. That kind of thing requires a strong hand. But reversing when opener has shown enough extra that you are fine to going game is a completely separate matter.
It's absolutely standard to bid 1h with 4-4 in the majors. The expectation is up the line bidding; opener either fits hearts or not, with a min most people bid 1s if no heart fit and you find the spade fit. If opener shows a min and denies spades, by rebidding their suit, or 1nt playing the denies spades style, RESPONDER THEN IGNORES THE SPADES LATER. With a min responder will pass opener's min rebid, and no major fit has been lost.