kenrexford, on 2011-May-28, 09:59, said:
Maybe they should read your book . Seriously though Ken, how often do you watch vugraph or read the world championship book or whatever and see pairs just cuebid to grand? Other than those italians that don't play keycard (I think they play something called turbo though?) it seems extremely rare to me.
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What your expert pairs should be doing is delicately cue-bidding to establish that they have the wherewithal to make a slam, then indelicately bidding Keycard to confirm that the opponents don't have the wherewithal to beat it.
I totally agree with the 2nd part and think that is how most pairs bid now. As far as the first part, I guess I only agree with the "should be." In practice in many post mortem discussions in online message forums, the "solutions" to a hand often involve cuebidding all the way to slam or grand, and it is better for this or that reason. I mean honestly when you can have an auction start 1S 2N 3C(short) 3D, I cannot imagine an auction where I need to cuebid to a slam or grand, we are already low enough that we can cuebid to make sure we have enough values and are not off an AK for slam, and then bid keycard. Of course preliminary cuebidding auctions also help for later auctions in keycard.
I am sure you could equally construct some auction where you cuebid all the way and both sides should know whats going on exactly, but in practice it never seems to work out that way.
I do not think it's a bad thing that slam bidding often works as you described in the 2nd paragraph I quoted (cuebid to make sure you have enough values and also every suit controlled, and then bid keycard to confirm you're not off 2 keycards or 1 plus the trump queen, etc).
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Or is it because there just isn't a consensus of what a high level cue bid shows or denies?
As gnasher indicated, often when you have done some cuebidding already, you are not sure if your partner has the ace, king, or stiff or void (some auctions you can eliminate the latter 2, but you still don't know about the former 2). Maybe one of your cuebids was last train just about values, so you're not sure if that's even a control. You have to sort all of that out, while still finding out if they have first and second round control, or whatever. On top of that, someone needs to figure out the trump quality situation. On top of that, maybe one partner will have more information than the other based on how the auction times out, but it's the other guy who needs the info to bid the grand, because he's sitting on extra tricks like KQJx that his partner doesn't know about.
Keycard eliminates all of that. By 4N, 5N, both partners have the same information about the other person's keycards. There is no doubt about trump quality or whether partners previous cuebid was the ace or the king. After that, bidding grands is pretty easy. For grand slam bidding it's tough to beat keycard, and for small slam bidding in most auctions you know whether you have enough values for slam before bidding keycard, and in some preempted auctions you may just choose to gamble, or you may choose to cuebid in that situation.
I mean, if it ain't broke don't fix it?