bidding question
#21
Posted 2018-April-26, 01:43
#22
Posted 2018-April-26, 02:21
PhilG007, on 2018-April-26, 00:38, said:
PhilG007, on 2018-April-26, 01:29, said:
6NT shouldn't be too hard to see. Duck a club, then play your club (throwing a spade) and four spades. West has to throw a red card, which gives you your 12th trick.
Having seen that, play 7♠ in exactly the same way, except reverse the first two tricks. Win the club, play a club ("throwing" a spade).
(In fact, you can just ruff two clubs, without even needing the squeeze, hah.)
#23
Posted 2018-April-26, 02:52
#25
Posted 2018-April-26, 07:23
Vampyr, on 2018-April-25, 10:35, said:
North sees the fit but he has not informed South, and as I said it is not universal to play 4NT as RKCB showing fit in the last suit bid. Some systems play it as plain Blackwood for 4 Aces in absence of a confirmed fit, some play it as RKCB for the first suit bid, some play it as a fit-showing quantitative slam-try. We play it as fit-showing RKCB only under duress from opponents, otherwise the suit must be fixed before either RKCB or control-bids.
But I agree that fit-showing RKCB is common and would be a reasonable guess with a pickup partner.
#26
Posted 2018-April-26, 08:34
Incidentally I disagree with the comment that it should be the hand with most of the controls who should do the asking. In general it is the hand without the controls who has the filler cards and would benefit most by control asking. Taking the current hand as an example, what useful information would South gain by using RKKB? North on the other hand will find out that his two KQs are worth four tricks and should allow him to bid the grand.
#27
Posted 2018-April-26, 09:11
GrahamJson, on 2018-April-26, 08:34, said:
It's RKCB: Roman Key Card Blackwood. I'm not sure what your second K is for, Kard?
Quote
But sometimes, as here, the timing of the auction doesn't allow much choice in who does the asking. If you can't establish the trump suit until opener bids 4♠ there's no room for any cue bidding before Blackwood.
#29
Posted 2018-April-26, 16:24
#31
Posted 2018-April-26, 17:05
manudude03, on 2018-April-26, 00:49, said:
Most likely 4C shows both majors and a slam try. Then 4S cooperates in the slam try and sets the suit.
#33
Posted 2018-April-27, 14:58
2C 2D(1)
2NT(2) 3C
3S 4NT
5H(3) 7S(4)
(1) waiting
(2) 22-24 ostensibly
(3)All five and the Q
(4) Hmm -- sounds like four spades three hearts three diamonds a club and two club ruffs. If the opponents really have a ten-card club fit, even then partner has a Jack that hasn't been accounted for (22-24), so unless he has AJ tight of clubs, there is trick 13.
If you play some form of Puppet Stayman, the auction is a little different in the middle, but eventually the same.
Cheers,
mike
#34
Posted 2018-April-29, 06:26
nekthen, on 2018-April-26, 01:10, said:
This is rather an implausible statement. Of course the responses are ambiguous. If you are saying this is not a good method to use when the bidding has deprived you of the space to make exploratory discoveries first, then I agree with you, but surely the problem is with your choice of ace asking methods.