Posted 2010-March-24, 11:12
Despite everyone suggesting how easily they'd reach the grand, I don't think it is easy at all. Obviously specialized methods work (Ken, I can show you a form of relay stayman after strong notrumps that makes slam bidding far, far more effective than your methods), but in what passes for standard, this is tougher than it looks.
Responder has to bring clubs into the picture, but may want to play in hearts (imagine opener Axxx Kx in the round suits).
So we have to start with a transfer, and texas is inappropriate because it devours too much space...and for the poster who suggested texas then a cue bid of 5♣....many if not most would play 5♣ as exclusion.
1N 2♦
2♥ 3♣
so far so good.
Now, to the poster who suggested that 3♦ by opener was a cuebid in support of clubs, I ask what you suggest opener bid with Jxx Ax AQJxx Kxx?
I suspect that unless one knew what East's hand looked like, everyone and their dog would bid 3♦. Why couldn't east be KQx KQxxx x Axxx or so?
For me, opener has such a spectacular hand in clubs that if responder is prepared to show the suit, rather than bid a choice of games 3N, we are happy to show our support by going beyond 3N: we raise to 4♣.
Now the spotlight turns to East. East can assume that he hit a home run in clubs, and it is difficult to construct a hand that goes beyond 3N or doesn't bid 3 of a pointed suit and lacks the heart Ace. So...East knows that slam is a good bet, but how to bid 7 with confidence?
AKx Ax xxxx KQxx makes grand silly...it may make but one shouldn't bid it unless desperate.
Exclusion keycard (5♠) drives us beyond 6♣ and 6N is silly on the example hand.
We have a good stall via 4♦, which fetches a reassuring 4♥.
We can now bid 4♠, over which I think opener bids 5♦...his hand is certainly worth committing to slam on this auction.
Now responder has a dilemma. 5N is wonderful if understood as GSF, but maybe it is pick a slam...a recent thread suggested that many would take it as such. I think, perhaps deluding myself, that this is a perfect sequence for GSF since everyone and their dog knows that this is a club hand.
If 5N is GSF, BYU (Bob's your uncle...I don't know if that is a universal saying)
If not, then over 5♦ we have to cue 5♥ and I think that opener has to bid the grand...he has too many working cards not to opposite a partner who is trying to get there.
But this is not easy.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari