mtvesuvius, on 2010-October-23, 19:51, said:
Kind of a style question I suppose, but I have had a lot of disagreement on this subject with a lot of partners who I consider to be very good players.
Basically, in uncontested auctions...how would you treat 5M
I play 5M the same (in some sense) in all of these auctions: it means "I have too good a hand to pass/sign-off and I have no more descriptive slam try available, do you have something extra over what you have shown so far?"
Usually this is neither asking for a control in a specific suit, nor asking for top trump honours. The former can usually be dealt with by cue-bidding, the latter by some form of keycard ask. If it is asking for trump quality, it is looking for more than just the AKQ (usually after partner has already shown a very good suit but you have a small singleton or void).
Looking at your example auctions, I'm not sure I'd ever have them, but here's an attempt:
1. This is just "do you like your hand?". A cue-bid instead would tend to imply worry about controls in one of the suits; this auction isn't worried about having two top losers but about whether there are twelve tricks
2. If anything, this must be looking for good trumps in context (cards such as the J10) because anything else can be solved by cue-bidding or keycard.
3. I know you signed off, but do you have anything extra?
4. Assuming 2C was game forcing, this is a very strange auction, but it sounds like "I have too much extra in the way of high cards to sign off, but nothing to cue bid" (a more likely version of this auction might be 2C - 2D - 2S - 3H - 3S - 5S)
5. I can't think of any hand that would bid like this.. but it still is "do you like your hand?"
6. Again, "do you have anything extra" - if responder was looking for a particular control, he can cuebid