hrothgar, on 2010-November-23, 11:09, said:
I've gotten a lot of very good results
1. Overcalling with hands like South's
2. Raising to 2♠ on hands like North's
And, on occassion, I've gotten very bad results doing the same.
Personally, i think that the pluses outweight the minuses.
I'm not gonna get too worked up when if/when the card gods aren't smiling...
To me, the fundamental issue on the hand is about variance:
Overcalling 1♠ is a high variance style.
If you're playing this style, you shouldn't be overly concerned about individual hands.
Its all about long term trends...
With all this said and done, if I were to attach blame, I'd primarily place it on North.
Both opponents have had an opportunity to clarify values and describe their hands. Preempting in Spades isn't quite as attractive as one might think.
RHO advanced 1NT over 1♠. He has limited his hand and announced that he has trump. We're a bit more vulnerable to a double.
North holds a quacky 4333. The 4th trump is nice, but there isn't that much offensive potential.
As I said, I don't have a serious problem with either bid. However, if I had to place blame I dislike the raise more than the overcall.
I'm appreciating your bridge-related posts more now than I have in years past, but I think you've slid off the road here:
Opening a moscito-style 1♥ systemically is fine, just as in any 4cM based system. However, once they have opened, overcalling frequently serves as a defensive tool. There are plenty of hands that I would open and not overcall, and many more that I would overcall and not open. The South hand is a pile of defense, without a lot of offense. However, I have convinced myself that competing on reasonable 4333's (actually JL convinced me) is a good idea, and this is a good example. I don't think spades is necessarily our final resting place, since there is a great chance that a red suit is better than spades.
Furthermore, you don't really want a spade lead against NT (unless partner tables it themselves). If partner leads any other suit, you welcome this.
If you are playing with a poor partner that cannot declare to save their life, then 1♠ has a lot going for it. You probably don't mind a spade lead against a suit contract playing with someone bad, since its better than a heart lead.
I get the 'high variance' idea, and that's fine, but what exactly are the big wins for 1♠? Are you simply trying to play contra the other table to generate swings? I'd be interested to see why you think 1♠ is better than double, although its easy to see how it might work better than pass.