To me no option appeals, though some are worse than others. Here are my thoughts for this hand, in no particular order, before drawing a conclusion:
- The hand is too weak for an opening. If we open and partner has a misfit - say a long minor, or both minors - we'll have no real way to slow down and might be in a terrible spot. Partner could also double something if the opponents interfere, expecting (much) more defence on our side. The hand has a lot of playing strength in spades or hearts, but almost none in NT, diamonds, clubs or on defence. Furthermore, the lighter we open, the more probable it is that partner has extra values and creeps up on that awkward 12-13 HCP range where we'll force to game but are entirely reliant on a major suit fit to land in a playable contract.
- I hate passing with this much shape. The first strike is half the battle, and the director put us in first. Shape hands show, balanced hands ask. Even the vulnerability is good (enough). This is a two-bid hand - we want to convey that we have spades, hearts and a high offence but low defence hand. That's the sort of thing that is very difficult to show in a single bid, but possibly doable in two bids. If we begin by passing we're voluntarily opting to delay our description. On general principles I don't like that.
- My system has no bid for this hand. I do not play any preempt showing both majors (or even a preempt showing a two-suited hand which may contain both majors). Even those who do play two-suited preempts don't show 6-5, though some people have two-suited 5-5 preempts which would be a great way to describe most of this hand. In conclusion, any bid is going to be a misdescription of my hand. This argues for pass, and I might be able to show both majors next round (e.g. with a Michaels/Ghestem style bid, or some people insist this is a negative inference of preempting on the second round only). As mentioned we have the majors, so we might have less trouble entering the auction than we might have had with any other suit combination. However, in general I do not like this approach.
Between the above there are several mediocre options - nothing appeals. In particular, I am thinking of pass, 1
♠, 2
♠(/2
♦ multi), 4
♠ and possibly a gadget showing a two-suited preempt. Of this set I prefer... 2
♠. My plan is to bid again, a rare exception to the rule that after a preempt we still our tongue. On 2
♠-2NT (opponents silent) I intend to rebid 4
♥ to show a 6-5. If partner does not make a strong bid I will choose next round whether to voluntarily bid 3
♥ or to conceal the hearts.
My choice is risky - if partner has short spades we may well miss a huge heart fit. Bidding twice in competition is also risky, giving the opponents two chances to double us (though keep in mind that if partner raises spades they only get the one!). On the flip side, I get to share my offensive
and defensive strength, my primary suit, and have the opportunity to tell partner about my secondary suit on some but not all continuations of the auction. I also get a chance to stay low on a misfit or partial misfit deal, as I'm not committed to rebidding 3
♥ on all competitive auctions. On balance I think 2
♠ is the most profitable way to show this hand.
Most partnerships have an agreement that opening a weak 2 with a side 4 card major is taboo, let alone a side 5 card major. Personally I'd be OK with making such an agreement - I think it's slightly worse than the converse, but 6-5 hands are so rare that the peace of mind of the partnership may be more valuable. With such partnership agreements I'd pass here, which I think is better than 1
♠. The chance that poor partner punishes us for opening light, by which I really mean we're punishing partner for opening so light that it falls outside my opening expectatations, is high.
The multi 2
♦ option would not appeal as much to me as a natural 2
♠, though I (currently) don't play multi. I think that using 2
♦-2
♠ as a positive bid for hearts is a wasteful idea - it is too rare, and leaks too much information as well. Without this tool the benefit of being flexible with your major drastically drops. More importantly though, how good are your agreements to get out in 3
♣ after 2
♦ Multi (I assume the agreements for getting out in 2
♦ are rock solid), or to find your best major fit when both opener and responder have only mild suit length disparity in the majors? You also lose the ability to show both suits on the second round, should you so desire. Personally I think the multi has more downsides than upsides compared to a natural weak 2 on this deal, and that that happens quite often.
jillybean, on 2025-June-22, 13:01, said:
Of course but isn't that is the value of these distributional hands? If we find a fit, this hand is huge.
If partner can't respond, or shows a minimum, non fit, I'm not bidding again.
I'm sympathetic towards this, but the concern isn't that partner is weak or can't act. The concern is that partner can and does act, with a fistful of wasted values and length opposite our shortage. Now we wish we hadn't shown opening strength which was based on distribution. Also as a little cherry on top: if partner is weak, I'd prefer to take away an extra level of bidding space from the opponents.