kenrexford, on Feb 27 2007, 01:28 PM, said:
Jlall, on Feb 27 2007, 12:18 PM, said:
heh, I just finished Ken's book last night.
Uh oh. Let me sit down first.
lol...
Many of your ideas are good, and the basic premise of using NT bids and rebids of your suits as something meaningful (and thus a negative inference when those are not used, like with other cuebids) is sound. Obviously you should make use of all possible room. I disagree when you say/imply that the shape will work itself out through cuebidding. You, as you said, do use a lot of tools already in use (ie last train and serious 3N), and introduce some specialized treatments which are useful in some auctions.
Your methods are certainly usable and playable, though I'm sure if I played them in some of the auctions where you try and find the perfecta slam I wouldn't, but the point of slam tools is to be effective when you feel you need them. Your methods are certainly an improvement on standard methods.
Your methods may be hard to remember at times but if any serious partnership wanted to put in the work they could learn it and it would be worthwhile as compared to putting in no effort and just cuebidding haphazardly.
The
book was pretty dry but that is expected with a text
book type
book and is not really a knock against you (even Victor Mollo could not write this
book so that it wouldn't be dry).
Your ideas were well thought out for the purpose of finding slams (or avoiding them). I think that they can often give away too much information to the opponents, but usually you can choose not to cuebid. The only auctions I really don't like are when you have set trumps at the 2 level and start cuebidding. Essentially you must continue to cuebid until you can't anymore, or until you find out you're off too many controls to play slam. That does not suit my style well, but again is certainly playable.
I think the problem with Arclight is that he came in with the notion that he would be reading a
book on "expert standard" cuebidding, and learn about when to cuebid and when not to cuebid. Anyone who has read your posts would not expect this out of your
book, and frankly you can write whatever you want and if you can get it into print more power to you. Arclight seems to have wanted you to write a different
book altogether which is not really fair to you. Your
book should be judged on how well it said what it was trying to say, not on what it was trying to say itself. You cannot be faulted for not saying what others wanted you to say.
As far as presenting your ideas, you did it well. I will not be using these ideas, but who knows, maybe some of them will be expert standard in 10 years and having read this
book will enable me to understand the system. This happens a lot. I feel like reading new ideas, whether I agree or disagree, and as we know I disagree with you very frequently, will help me grow as a bridge player and expand my horizons. The one thing I never want to happen is for me to be stuck in my ways irreversibly.
As far as who this
book would be useful to, obviously not intermediates or lower. It would probably be most useful to a partnership that is trying to work on their slam bidding and needs a new approach and is willing to invest time into working on it or to people like me who just enjoy looking at the game from different perspectives. It is a limited crowd, but I don't get the feeling ken wrote this
book to cater to the largest possible target audience and make the most possible money.