billw55: with a minor one-suiter, you have to decide between one of pass, double, 3NT and 5/6m. Not perfect but you don't have such a wide range of choices with 5/5 M+m hands (now reduced to basically pass and 4M: you don't want to double with them. actually pass is also scarier here than with some opening hand with a 6-card minor because game needs very little when you have 5-5 yourself).
mgoetze, on 2012-June-13, 06:56, said:
Well OK but... are you planning to bid 5♥ if partner bids 5♦? Well, I guess it could work.
I'm not sure but I don't think that was the rebid I had in mind.
Well now the discussion has moved partially to the other thread but I'll reply here (mostly because I would have to reply "I don't know" to most sequences). I can either pass, rebid 5H, 5S or 6D if my partner bids 5D. In any case, I'm in a better position having started by describing my hand as 5+
♥, 5+
♦, game forcing (of course this doesn't mean that I would have opened 2
♣, but it's also not every opening hand) than describing my hand as 55+ minors or a heart slam try, or what not. Of course this depends on what exactly we play. If I sat down with a random person and agreed on NLM but had no time to talk about other bids, I'd take 4S as minors and 4NT also as minors (but gnasher's solution is nice so I will assume that from now). I would be confused when my partner rebid hearts. My confusion is reflected by the fact that I thought you'd rebid 5
♦, showing maybe 5
♥+5
♦, but now I see maybe you want to bid 5
♥, showing a slam try in hearts, saying nothing about diamonds.
Anyway, are you saying that you play 4D as (pardon the hcp but I like numbers more) 12-15 and 4
♠/4NT as 16+, not suitable for double, could be a two-suiter, could be a one-suiter?
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
George Carlin