fromageGB, on 2012-September-10, 07:29, said:
To those who play 2♣ as non-forcing : what do you do with a better (say invitational values) hand?
You still bid nf 2
♣ NF doesn't mean that you have a trash. You are looking at it the other way and trying to make response to an overcall a "defined bid" which is very hard to do. Overcaller will pass with minimum values and no fit. He will almost always show if he has a fit to your suit and a minimum hand by simple raise, number of trumps your side holds will be usually enough to play a 3 level partscore in the worst case. As oppose to playing it forcing now if overcaller makes another bid rather than raising you or cueing or passing, you will have extra info about his hand than those who plays it forcing, because after all pd has to bid something over a forcing 2
♣, but over a nf 2
♣ you know he is bidding because he wants to, not because he was forced to.
It has downsides too, of course. But i wouldn't worry about pd passing my 2
♣ when he overcalled 1
♠ over 1
♥ and i have xx xx AQx AKJxxx. Lets say he has AJxxx Kxx Jxxx x. I am happy to play 2
♣. Lets say he has AJxxx xxx Jx Qxx and raised me to 3
♣ i am still happy to play there. 1 level overcall by the way, for me, can be made with much weaker hands than the example i gave for pd. To me AQTxx alone is basically enough to make an overcall (but i am not stupid, vulnerability matters of course)
So playing nf but constructive style responses to overcall is not as scary as people thinks of it. It really doesnt worth to sit and imagine hands where we may have a giant when at least 3 people at the table are bidding, sometimes 4 and noone preempted. It gives you a lot of flexibility.
Playing it forcing also has some advantages, for example you have 3 card fit + 6 card suit or AQ AK KJ KQ tide support for pd + long suit of yours and you really dont want pd to pass even with min and you really wanna mention your suit too...but i like it the other way.