Zelandakh, on 2020-February-01, 21:10, said:
While I agree wholeheartedly with your sentiment it is worth mentioning that many Benji pairs play 2
♣ - 2
♦; 3m as non-forcing. If Opener wants to force beyond 3m then they need to open 2
♦.
That said, I have never seen anyone jump to 4
♦ in a Benji sequence. I know some jumps in the original methods were used as two-suiters so I would be a little worried that partner might decide I had the majors doing this without agreement. Even if partner decides we do have diamonds we are not out of the woods as they might think we are psyching to mess the opps up with some kind of preemptive hand.
Still, you can't argue with success.
I'm not sure 3
♦ is forcing, and in any case, it doesn't get over the primary feature of a very long self supporting suit. I felt the need to jump to show that long strong suit, that is the normal way it is done playing Benji, but because the suit is a minor, that makes it more awkward because there is no way to jump without going to the four level. If it were a major, I could jump to the three level which is more convenient.
If I held my partner's hand, I would have responded 2
♠, but many people playing Benji at club level in the UK just make the relay bid whatever they hold. After that response, I would be more inclined to bid 3
♦.
Am I correct in thinking some people play 1m - 1M - 3NT as showing an opening hand with a long solid minor when all the balanced hand strengths are covered by other bids/rebids?