I may be exhibiting confused misinterpretation grown from paranoia, but I sense a slight. The inference seems to be that even contemplating slam after this start must be based upon a lack of understandings of the fundamentals of the game.
I'm not sure precisely what fundamentals are implicated in this specific situation. The specific situation seems to be whether it is possible to initiate a slam move in a given game-invite auction. That may seem to be an impossible problem to face, as it seems unlikely that one partner would make a limited, non-forcing call and the other a simple game invite (offering 10 tricks), both intelligently, and yet the partnership could suddenly contemplate 12 tricks.
I would suggest, however that this phenomenon is real, and not purely the fruits of misunderstanding of fundamentals. Rather, it is perhaps a result of an understanding of a principle that is often missed. "Evaluation" is a concept first taught as a function of HCP's. The rookie only sees HCP's. A newbie I play with regularly, for instance, fails to see, in practice, that a 6-4 8-count is huge opposite a 1NT opening, as opposed to a 4333 8-count.
Then, you add distributional analysis, like points for shortness or points for length. Maybe you advance into LTC, thereby gaining better understanding, always of evaluating the potential of your hand. You might even get into a concept like dummy points, or cover cards, to start to see the poential of fit-analysis.
Fit-analysis is where the "impossible" becomes possible. Fit-analysis is often coupled with empathy for conservative views taken before safety is assured, empathy for evaluations based upon likelihood of layouts that may change, empathy for variables that move from rare to likely, and the like.
A simple example. Consider the potential power of 5431 opposite 5332. If one was to guess knowing somehow that the patterns were 5431 opposite 5332, one might expect
♠5
♥4
♦3
♣1 opposite
♠2
♥3
♦3
♣5. Nine honor covers, worth 29 HCP's, fill in the spaces and yield an expectation of nine tricks. Distribution provides little expectation of ruffing tricks, as no fit is present. Thus, normal HCP analysis, and even cover-card analysis, justifies caution.
Switch the pattern such that a spade fit is present. Maybe
♠5
♥4
♦3
♣1 opposite
♠3
♥2
♦3
♣5. The same 29 HCP's are needed to cover all the holes. A ruff or two may be possible, but these are not on the short side. So, the stiff takes on mild distributional value. The doubleton offers a really slow possibility of one trick from ruffing. Establishing clubs is a remote hope.
Now, we assume that a major will be raised, even if not the "ideal" contract. What happens if we further tweak the distribution? Suppose it is now
♠5
♥4
♦3
♣1 opposite
♠3
♥5
♦2
♣3? The same 29 HCP's fill the holes. If the contract remains spades, the shortness has limited value as before. However, the secondary heart fit now provides a better likelihood of pips coming in. The hand strength increases, but not tremendously.
What if, however, the auction converts to contemplation of the heart fit as trumps? Suddenly, the shortness becomes a great asset, as you are now ruffing on the short side. Instead of reducing the long suit, perhaps a negative feature, you are likely gaining two entire tricks. Thus, if the partnership was in an invitational posture as to a spade contract, just getting to 10 tricks after full exchange, you suddenly get to 12 tricks of the trump suit is shifted to hearts, the expect 10 plus two additional tricks from trumps. That, and the gain from converting a 5-3 trump fit, and all the bad things that can happen there, to a 5-4 trump fit, a safer fit and one that might even negate Q-J-10-9 or K-J-9-x from the opposition to no tricks.
This phenomenon occurs because of the partnership discussion. One starts with a spade opening. The other, applying a sound theory to support with support, raises with a limitefd hand (maybe, 6-9, with not much distributional interest -- 5332). Opener invites game, showing pattern (the hearts), inviting because 6-9 and a fit will produce game enough of the time only if responder was maximum. Hearing new distributional information, a new strain offers itself, and old assumptions on both sides crumble away, the rare becoming the known. Thus, slam aspirations replace mere game hopes.
A simple example:
West would open 1
♠ on his 5431, 14-HCP, 16-point with distribution, 6 1/2 loser hand. East would make a simple raise with his 8-HCP, 9-point with distribution, 8 1/2 loser, 2 1/2 cover-card hand. Opener would invite with his hand, showing diamonds if using natural game tries, because he needs a maximum, well-placed, to make game. East can accept the game try in spades.
If the partnershop changes tack at the 3
♦ point, however, in an auction that could have concluded with rejection of the game try, Responder might bid, say, 3NT, showing three internal cover cards (
♠Q,
♦A,
♦Q). Opener would then be able to re-evaluate as well and virtually see twelve tricks in the play.
So, perhaps 1
♥-1
♠-2
♥-3
♥ is not a start that lends itself well to possible new-fit slam scenarios. Maybe no one would rebid 2
♥ with void-AKJxxx-xxxx-Axx? Maybe no one would have reciprocated with 1
♠...3
♥ holding xxxx-xx-AKQxx-xx?
The 3
♠ call seems obviously choice of games, now. However, 4
♣ and 4
♦ as slam moves are not impossible, as there are layouts where the auction to date would be consistent as game-only moves and yet slam is possible but not practical to seek previously. This sequence might make those aspirations very rare chances, and perhaps the likelihood of discovering those layouts is lower than the risk to the game from actually exploring those possibilities. However, I doubt that pure beginners would conduct this sort of analysis, and I strongly disagree that invitational auctions cannot involve reassessment to slam aspirational unless lacking fundamentals.
The key problem is in knowing what pattern blends are possible in a given auction to produce slam from invites and catering slam moves to those patterns if the slam move does not jeopardize the game. This may be obvious to some, and the slam moves well-known. I doubt that. Rather, I'd assume that most need to figure out strange auctions that offer strange possibilities, then discuss the matrix necessary, and then discuss the methods necessary to discover that matrix. I'm aware of few sources for these matrices. My gut tells me that matrices exist in this auction, but I'm still uncertain as to what they are, if they are safe to explore, and the like.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.