Posted 2011-December-16, 12:39
I'm surprised that no-one has commented on the response scheme that the OP described as used by his club-mates: 1st step 0 or 4, second step 1 or 3.
This is a basic error. There is a reason why keycard responses are 1430 or 0314.
The asking bidder will almost never have any trouble identifying whether opener has 0 or 3, otoh, or 1 or 4 oto.
Admittedly, asking bidder will usually be able to distinguish 1 or 3, and should always be able to tell 0 from 4, but 'usually' isn't the same as 'almost never', and this is too great a cost in the opinion of many (I mean, has anyone ever seen 1340 keycard?)
As for gerber, there is nothing wrong with the convention, imo. I play it myself in almost all partnerships....the only one in which I didn't used a form of relay with strong hands responding to 1N and a different structure over 2N, so it wasn't needed.
However, my experience of playing in club games is that many non-experts use 4♣ as keycard in suit auctions, which is not exactly what Mr. Gerber proposed, as I recall.
Gerber is fine if it is confined to notrump auctions and is a JUMP over a notrump bid, where the 4♣ bidder is so far, in the auction, unlimited.
Where a lot of non-experts go wrong is in thinking that they can use 4♣ in virtually any auction as Ace asking.
In fairness, they will usually survive this mis-use, and in addition, they usually don't understand bidding well enough to realize that there are better uses for the 4♣ call in just about every such auction.
Such players, in my experience, don't know how to cuebid. And learning how to bid collaboratively, with both partners exchanging information in a fairly subtle way, is far more difficult, and far more intimidating, for the average club player than simply agreeing that 4♣ asks for Aces.
Bridge is a game of percentages. Those of us who are serious about the game will devote a lot of time and effort to finding ways to improve our bidding even on situations that may arise perhaps once or twice a year. In my most detailed partnership, that lasted for some 5 years, we had agreements on situations that, as far as I recall, never came up....but we were ready for them if they did, and if we remembered!
Most club players, even those who play in an established partnership, simply aren't interested in that level of effort. They have an agreement that performs adequately 80-85% of the time it comes up. Even when it fails, their results are comparable to the rest of the (weak) field. And they effectively have no other use for the call because they don't know how to cuebid or engage in auctions full of inferences.
Abandoning gerber or limiting it to its intended place, in notrump auctions, would leave them effectively without a use for a call, and having to bid 4N rather than 4♣.
No serious bridge player would long use gerber other than over 1N, but the vast majority of bridge players aren't and never will be serious.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari