bidding question
#2
Posted 2018-April-25, 09:01
#4
Posted 2018-April-25, 09:45
cencio, on 2018-April-25, 09:36, said:
It sounds like a silly complication to me, the convention already handles 5 KeyCards+Q.
But what's most important is to agree all this stuff with your partner.
For instance your 4♣ bid could have many meanings, and even the assumption that 4NT is Roman KeyCard for the last suit bid is far from universal.
#5
Posted 2018-April-25, 09:45
cencio, on 2018-April-25, 09:36, said:
I assume you mean it shows either 3 aces or 5+Q, instead of 0/3 aces.
That's a reasonable agreement, but I don't think it's considered a standard part of RKCB. So you would need to discuss it with partner first.
#6
Posted 2018-April-25, 09:52
cencio, on 2018-April-25, 09:36, said:
I am not sure the merits of this approach compensate sufficiently for the memory load. Consistency may be the hobgoblin etc, but it also has advantages!
I am also not sure that rightsiding is important enough to waste either or both 4m bids for responder to show both majors. LOL I play Kokish, so declarer in a major suit is predetermined!
#8
Posted 2018-April-25, 10:05
Also note 5+Q = 21 points, so that's basically all you can have for a 2N rather than 2♣ then 2N.
#9
Posted 2018-April-25, 10:30
Cyberyeti, on 2018-April-25, 10:05, said:
Also note 5+Q = 21 points, so that's basically all you can have for a 2N rather than 2♣ then 2N.
It’s not super obvious to me how you would manage voidwood in this auction.
#10
Posted 2018-April-25, 10:35
pescetom, on 2018-April-25, 09:45, said:
Well, a fit has been found, so it is very reasonable.
#12
Posted 2018-April-25, 12:56
cencio, on 2018-April-25, 10:03, said:
Easy to bid 7♠ after the 5♠ response and North can count on 11 top tricks and 2♣ ruffs even after a trump lead and 4-1 split. If South has fewer than 3 ♣ then he will have 4 cards in a red suit and you can hope that a red suit will behave to provide a 4th trick.
#13
Posted 2018-April-25, 17:28
ahydra
#14
Posted 2018-April-25, 22:53
If responder figures out the missing honors besides the As and ♠ K (i.e. keycards), it will be found these are ♠ Q ♥ J ♦ J ♣ KQJ which total up to 10 points. Of these, the ♠ Q is known because of the response. But adding any 2 key cards to these points only gets you to a maximum 18 HCP not enough for a 2 NT opener. So logic tells you opener must have at least 3 keycards to open 2 NT and, therefore, must have 5 plus the Queen.
#16
Posted 2018-April-26, 00:38
cencio, on 2018-April-25, 08:46, said:
Which suit is trumps? I can follow the bidding up to a point 3♣ was Stayman,3♦ denied a major. but I can see South has a four card spade suit(!)
What does 4♣ mean? I need enlightenment. This game is getting far too damn technical I also note from the lie of the cards in the diagram that 6♠ and 6NT are
doomed to failure. So N/S are really on a hiding to nothing
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#17
Posted 2018-April-26, 00:49
PhilG007, on 2018-April-26, 00:38, said:
What does 4♣ mean? I need enlightenment. This game is getting far too damn technical I also note from the lie of the cards in the diagram that 6♠ and 6NT are
doomed to failure. So N/S are really on a hiding to nothing
3C was presumably puppet stayman, so 3D says he does have a 4 card major. Not sure what 4C was meant as, probably asking for preference (though 4D usually asks for that). 7S is an excellent contract and does make on the lie of the cards (so does 6NT, but that's a little tougher to see).
#18
Posted 2018-April-26, 01:02
#19
Posted 2018-April-26, 01:10
A basic tenet of using RKCB is that the response can never be ambiguous. If that is possible, you do not know enough about the hand to be launching a slam investigation
#20
Posted 2018-April-26, 01:29
manudude03, on 2018-April-26, 00:49, said:
From the diagram, I find it hard to see how 7♠ can make Its difficult to see how declarer can avoid at least one loser
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog