blackshoe, on 2013-August-10, 09:45, said:
Heh. There's at least one bid missing out of those.
You are right. I fixed it.
blackshoe, on 2013-August-10, 09:45, said:
I would explain the auction in the second case this way: "opener has shown a strong GF unbalanced hand <insert criteria here>, at least 5 spades, first or second round control of both round suits, and the values to go to slam opposite responder's hand. Responder has shown no good suit of his own, a spade fit, mild slam interest, first or second round control of diamonds, and 3 keycards* for spades."
Now, what goes faster: Asking after the auction or asking during the auction?
The point is that most people can figure this entire thing out during the auction - as long as they know that 2
♣ was strong and artificial. There is no need to waste all this extra time. (If there would be something else going on there would be a post alert.)
But now, suppose that the opponents are playing Precision and think that a natural 2
♣ opening doesn't need an alert? You would assign a completely different meaning to the whole auction. However, again, if you knew from the start that they were playing Precision, you can pretty much figure out the whole auction as it is proceeding: 4
♣ sets clubs as trumps (for now). 4
♦, 4
♥ and 4
♠ were cues. 4NT was RKCB (1430). 5
♦ showed 0 or 3 keycards for clubs. 6
♠ is the contract.
So, if you know from the start whether they are playing something SAYC like (2/1, Acol, ..) or Precision like (Polish club, Swedish club, ...) you are capable of understanding the whole auction without any need for additional questions. But if you don't know what 2
♣ meant, you will be clueless for 6 rounds of bidding and the opponents will have to spell out the whole auction for you before you can start thinking about your opening lead. In contrast, if you know the meaning of 2
♣ from the start, you can have your lead ready by the time the last pass card is put on the table.
I think that makes a large difference in a speedball tournament.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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