mikeh, on 2011-January-05, 11:43, said:
Interesting idea....I confess I'd never heard of it. I suspect, however, that the concept might be beyond an 'advanced' player, and even if it weren't, I'd expect that many would be afraid that their 'advanced' player wouldn't understand it either.
How do you distinguish between the trump cue bid and the choice of slams meaning? I'm not being argumentative here...the notion of a trump cue intrigues me but, as I say, it's not something I have seen before so would appreciate insight into when it applies. Is it only over a 5 level cue of their suit?
Even if intended as a trump cue, that doesn't excuse 6N
Hey Mike,
Yeah I would not really know what it meant undiscussed tbh, often times people define these 5N bids as "still interested in 7" which is good if say, clubs is our suit (last train or whatever). When spades is our suit and we're just at 5H, this meaning is not useful since we can bid 6C, 6D, 6H all to try for 7. In general I like to be able to "cuebid" trumps so that we don't keep cuebidding and bid 7 off a high trump. Of course good judgement can often avoid that, but it's nice to be on more firm ground whether you have a trump loser or not.
I was mainly meaning this in auctions where it would usually be a last train or some kind of grope for 7, unable to cuebid something else, where that would no longer apply since we have enough room (since our suit is spades).
Often times last train and good trumps will be similar in the context of the auction anyways (depending on what's been cuebid already) so it doesn't matter what langauge you use.
If pick a slam is a possible meaning in some auction, I like it. Here 5H is a pretty strong move in spades and I would assume we're locked into spades and that pick a slam is no longer viable. I guess you could come up with some hands where 6C is best maybe, so if you meant it as that I would see your point (though not really agree that that is the best meaning).
I guess an old fashioned way to play would be that it's grand slam force, I don't like that meaning much either.
I really meant that I would assume a random expert was making some grand slam try with 5N, and that he probably had good trumps for it (else he would just cuebid). For instance maybe his hand is really good and he just wants to hear 6C before bidding 7, obviously in that case he has good trumps so "generic grand slam try" is really the same thing as "trump cuebid"