HardVector, on 2019-August-19, 08:50, said:
Why should you want to make a forcing raise in a minor when you have a major suit? 1m-(p)-1M is still forcing, is it not? POOF, problem solved, partner is forced to bid.
I think you misunderstood Arend: he was speaking, I think, about the very real issues that arise when one has a forcing raise in a minor, without a 4 card major, and yet don't have a forcing raise tool in your system.
Some basic forms of 'standard' suffer from this, and the result has been a number of attempts at 'fixes', of which criss-cross and a forcing 2N are examples.
Imo, inverted minors with good subsequent sequences are the best I have seen, but my point was that most players who use inverted minors, in my experience, are so focused on showing or denying stoppers, especially in the majors, that they have problems bidding minor suit games or slams. Now, I am mostly an imp player, and so I would far rather be in a cold 5m making 5 than in a 65% 3N that makes 10 tricks or goes down, but at mps one's priorities change. Of course, I like to think that I can have it both ways, but my point is that simple inverted doesn't work well.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari