Last Train to Clarksville
#1
Posted 2012-January-20, 00:34
In my opinion "Last Train" as part of your cue-bidding mechanism is the most valuable and vital cue-bidding tool that has been invented in the last 30 years. Last train operates in major suit slam auctions and when spades are agreed the bid of 4♥ (one below the major) is the Last Train bid and when hearts are agreed 4♦ (again one below the major) is the Last Train bid.
I have yet to witness LTTC in action, either against me (online bridge or offline bridge), or being used during a Vugraph Live Broadcast (including the recent Bermuda Bowl).
Possible reasons for its invisibility
1.) Opportunities for using it are rare. Therefore few players make the effort to learn it properly.
2.) LTTC is a complex convention. Therefore few players make the effort to learn it properly.
3.) Partnership has other slam exploring agreements. LTTC is not one of them.
Any thoughts on LTTC?
How often have you encountered it?
Does your regular partnership use it?
#2
Posted 2012-January-20, 00:40
How often have you encountered it?
A few times. Not often and only when used by good opponents.
Does your regular partnership use it?
Yes.
#3
Posted 2012-January-20, 00:43
Low on my list for new players to learn.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#4
Posted 2012-January-20, 01:05
How useful it is depends in large part on what your cuebidding style is. My last regular p and I used Brashler-style sweep cues, and had essentially no need for it. The typical 'problem auctions' like 1S-3S-4D with diamonds but lacking clubs did not happen, because our auction started 1S-3S-3NT("I don't have clubs, do you?")
If you are committed to Italian style cues and already have a meaning for 3NT you aren't willing to give up, then yes, adding LTTC is an improvement.
#5
Posted 2012-January-20, 06:47
B. I do not think LTTC is common amongst non-experts. If you are not playing in those circles then you may well never see it "live".
C. My preference is to use denial cue bids which alleviates the need for LTTC. My experience is that this method is far simpler to use but still effective.
With reference to your quote, I do not know when RKCB, Roman cue bids, Serious/Frivolous or 5NT pick a slam were invented but each of these is more important than LTTC imo. Also, Justin has said on these forums that using 4NT as LTTC with clubs agreed has been a huge winner for him.
#6
Posted 2012-January-20, 08:45
"surprise! I'm key-carding this auction"
as THE slam-try.
Why aren't slammy stuff shown way lower?
Some Jump Shift reserved to invite slam,
demand trump quality, controls, eg?
#7
Posted 2012-January-20, 09:04
32519, on 2012-January-20, 00:34, said:
How often have you encountered it?
Does your regular partnership use it?
The more important application of this idea, in my opinion, is at the 3-level. When opponents ask about this bid, I sometimes explain is as "attempt to win the post-mortem."
#8
Posted 2012-January-20, 09:28
Understanding why you should always bid the first cuebid available and that cuebidding is a way to deny rather than to show is the cornerstone to standard slam bidding and when you understand that LTTC become simple.
1S--3S (limit)
4D --??
Here 4D show a D control but more importantly it denies a club control (playing Italian cuebid you MUST NOT not bid 4D with a club control). Denying the club control is just way more significant than whatever holding you could have in D or H. Partner responses will mostly be based on what hes got in clubs and not what hes got in D/H/S.
---4S signoff(i dont have anything in clubs, it doesnt matter what ive got in D/H/S since we are losing 2 quick tricks in clubs
---4H could have 2 meanings. A) i have something in clubs but no extras (I may or may not have a H control) or B) I have a club control but im lacking a H control (I may may or may not have extras) .
The corollary is
---4Nt A) I have something in clubs and slam interest ask for Aces or keycards ( I may or may not have a H control) --B) I have a C+H control and im asking for Aces/keycards (I may or may not have extras).
IMO non serious 3Nt is waaayyy more useful than last train.
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#9
Posted 2012-January-20, 11:09
Vampyr, on 2012-January-20, 09:04, said:
Seriously, as Vampyr is well aware, they are very useful - provided when you explain it as a blame transfer, you're joking.
#10
Posted 2012-January-20, 11:10
#11
Posted 2012-January-20, 15:25
whereagles, on 2012-January-20, 11:10, said:
No. They are not mutually exclusive, you should play both.
It comes up quite often and gives you the opportunity to show various strengths. The most common situation is when partner skips 1 cuebid which you hold, while you don't hold the other one. For example with ♠ as trumps set at 3-level your partner bids 4♦ cue. When you hold a ♣ control but no ♥ control, you're out of options without LTTC. It could be that you land on your fit without playing this, but like others said, sometimes it's invisible.
As an extra for whereagles, say you set ♠ with 3♠, the auction can also go ...-3♠-3NT!-4♦ which is basically the same. Here, you still want to have LTTC at your disposal when you hold a ♣ control but no ♥ control.
Imo it's a very good tool, it's logical, but not for a beginner. It's a must have (or some variation if that exists) in any self respecting partnership.
#12
Posted 2012-January-23, 21:04
#13
Posted 2012-January-24, 03:09
Free, on 2012-January-20, 15:25, said:
All my partnerships lack self-respect.
#14
Posted 2012-January-24, 09:06
lamford, on 2012-January-23, 21:04, said:
I'm actually thinking of something else: after a forcing raise (e.g. 1M-2x-2M-3M)
1st step = not interested in slam (frivolous). Pard bids next free step RKCB.
2nd step+= interested in slam, RKCB responses.
#15
Posted 2012-January-24, 09:19
whereagles, on 2012-January-24, 09:06, said:
1st step = not interested in slam (frivolous). Pard bids next free step RKCB.
2nd step+= interested in slam, RKCB responses.
You are about 1 step away from the G-word here...! I think if you have the space to use the bids between 3X and 4X for cue bids in order to check whether the 5 level will be safe it is wise to do so. The method you propose works well at the 4 level though, typically in a minor.
#16
Posted 2012-January-24, 09:58
As to LTTC it seems it should be useful in some cases but I just don't see it coming up often enough to ever bother about it.
Cuebids should be exchanged only if slam interest is established. Unfortunately many systems fail in this respect but you lose 0.25 or w/e that is of the trick on average every time you tell them where all your honors are. I don't know how Meckwell plays but it seems they somehow never are at 5 level while avoiding cuebids on game hands too. I think this style is what we should be striving for.
#17
Posted 2012-January-24, 12:33
Zelandakh, on 2012-January-24, 09:19, said:
Asking about aces in general is not evil It is only so in the G-word context!
Zelandakh, on 2012-January-24, 09:19, said:
The idea is to swap RKCB and controls. If after the RKCB response pard has doubts about controls, he can use denial cues in HEL style. Example:
1♥ 2♦
2♥ 3♥
4♣ 4♦/4♠/4NT
4♣ = slam interest, 1-4 keys
4♦/4♠/4NT = worried about the HEL suit, i.e. spades/diamonds/clubs (4♥ would be lack of keys)
The advantage is that you can start grand slam tries at the 5 level. This scheme is still very crude still. There are some issues to sort, but you get the point.
#18
Posted 2013-April-10, 15:17
whereagles, on 2012-January-24, 12:33, said:
Ace asking is evil convention.
It is very hard to try to teach youngesters not to use it after they have learned it from start as only slam exploration method.
But anyway. LTTC is part of "standard" cue biding that I try to teach
#19
Posted 2013-April-11, 04:51
Qxx
xxx
Ax
1S - 4D
??
- hrothgar