jdiana, on 2024-December-13, 14:36, said:
I was just wondering about this the other day - how should a "bust" be defined? My old notes say "less than two queens", so we would bid 2ā¦ with two queens, or a singleton king (or ace, of course) but bid 2ā„ (bust) with QJx. It sounds like mikeh defines it as lacking an ace or king.
How do others define it? Do methods make a difference, i.e., is it different if you play 2ā„ as an immediate negative, or the old-fashioned "cheaper minor" as a double negative, or birthright/Kokish?
Iāve long played 2H as denying any controlā¦.A or King. It serves to let opener know, on huge hands, whether itās worth exploring for slam.
The only drawback Iāve experienced is when opener has 25+ hcp, or a good 24 (ok, any 24 is āgoodā but I mean āabove averageā).
Then opener is forced to bid 3N. And this could be just ā9 tricks on any leadā so responder canāt stayman or transfer with most hands on which heād like to do so.
I played this method for 40 years and hardly ever had that arise but itās happened five or six times in the last year! Probably in part because Iāve been playing more.
This is a big flaw, although weāve been lucky so far and havenāt suffered any disasters. However, Iām yet to find an alternative that appeals. I truly detest 2D waiting then cheapest minor or cheapest 3 level suit over openerās 3m rebid as āsecond negativeā. I think itās simply bad for responder to take two rounds of bidding, making two artificial bids, to define his strength and not even getting started on bidding shape. Otoh, it neatly solves the big balanced hand v āI can take 9 tricksā issueā¦.you can play birthright over the waiting 2D with the balanced hand and, if you choose, use 3N as āto playā, subject of course to responder having a good hand.
Btw, pure control showing responses have similar problemsā¦.the bidding can get too high too quickly before responder can bid shapeā¦.and opener sometimes canāt even introduce his major below the 3 level.
Btw, 2H isnāt necessarily ānegativeā. I was given a hand the other dayā¦.x Qxx QJ10xxx QJx. 2C 2H 2N 3S 3N 4Dā¦.2H no ace or king, 3S forces 3N, 4D long diamonds, some interest in 5D or 6D. It was trivial for opener to drive to slam and equally trivial to avoid grand.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari