Minor suit slam bidding
#1
Posted 2015-September-01, 08:31
1♥-2♦; 3♦
We play 2♦ as forcing to game with 5+ diamonds, and 3♦ as showing "extras" - but I believe the modern interpretation of extras is "if I've got 4-card support, well, I'll have a real opening hand at least, not those ratty 10 HCP I had last time".
In other words, opener still has a huge range, and bidding 4♦ as RKCB isn't going to help me figure out whether we have 12 tricks or only 10.
Which methods would you recommend here for a serious but non-expert partnership? (Preferably ones that can be abstracted to other sequences than just this one.)
-- Bertrand Russell
#2
Posted 2015-September-01, 09:10
to use your example partner may still have that ten hcp hand
xxx..AQT98..AT98..x or if you prefer
xx...AQT98...AT98...xx
In other words our first priority is still the question what is our best game.
Yes that means finding that diamond slam may still be tough vs say 3nt.
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I don't play this second style but I suppose option2 might be rebid 2h with all hands that do not have very real extras so 3d shows a really good hand.
#3
Posted 2015-September-01, 12:15
We also play a bid of 4m in a forcing auction where any other four-level call would implicitly agree the minor as Turbo, showing an even number of keycards. That tends to work very well if no-one has a void - hence the other thread about how to deal with voids. It gives you a lot more room for cueing than Minorwood, and a lot less risk of ending up in 6 off two KCs/playing in 5m+1 because you didn't have the option to safely ask for KCs.
#4
Posted 2015-September-01, 13:48
#5
Posted 2015-September-01, 14:53
Another aid would be to switch to kickback - or call it redwood - and then a bid of 4m would be slam suggestive, but not committal. It shows additional strength or slam suitability, but not a hand good enough to unilaterally blast off in ace asking. Partner then has the option of bidding 4m+1 to ace ask, or 5m as a denial.
The combination of these two can be quite effective, regardless of what might be shown in the way of cue bidding between 3m and 4m, as cue bidding in the minors is often checking out NT (showing stops) rather than suggesting or aiding slam. Keeping to hcp as a simple example : 1♥ 2♦(GF), 3♦(15+) 4♦(I'm pretty good too, say 15) 4♥(OK, how many aces?). Or substitute controls/loser/side tricks evaluation for hcp of course.
A third method that can help the non-expert partnership is to make a judgement as to whether your own hand is the one that should be showing aces and kings, or the one asking. If you have no unexpected side suit trick-taking potential, and you have some aces and kings but you don't have the useful queens and jacks, and the partnership bidding to date has shown slam values, then your hand is more suitable to show aces than ask for them. Partner is better placed to make the judgement of whether 12 or 13 tricks. When you get to the region of 4m, and trumps are agreed, instead of bidding 4m+1 as the ace ask, skip that and make a higher bid to give your ace response, exactly as if partner had asked for aces. Partner then takes over checking on the Q and asking for kings.
#6
Posted 2015-September-01, 15:30
#7
Posted 2015-September-01, 16:10
fromageGB, on 2015-September-01, 14:53, said:
Nah, I'll call it kickback since we already play 4♠ as RKCB for hearts. Yes, kickback is the direction I'm leaning in but I thought I'd see whether this thread can provide other good input.
Here's another auction:
1♦ - 1♠ - 2♥ - 3♦
We play Lebensohl/Ingberman so 3♦ is forcing. How to proceed? Should 3♠ be offering 3-card support or should it show something like honor doubleton, probing for slam?
-- Bertrand Russell
#8
Posted 2015-September-01, 17:09
3♥ = double fit
3♠ = slam try in diamonds
3NT = natural
4♣ = starts a cue auction with diamonds agreed
4♦ = CKCB
The disadvantage is obviously that cue auctions start considerably higher than playing natural. The advantage is getting better range clarification and being able to stop in 3NT when the slam try gets rejected.
#9
Posted 2015-September-01, 17:15
mgoetze, on 2015-September-01, 16:10, said:
1♦ - 1♠ - 2♥ - 3♦
We play Lebensohl/Ingberman so 3♦ is forcing. How to proceed? Should 3♠ be offering 3-card support or should it show something like honor doubleton, probing for slam?
Note that you could if you wanted use precisely the same structure here except that now 3♥ shows an x56y hand. Another reasonable use for 3♠ would be checking on the club situation for making an informed decision about strain and I think I prefer all 3 of these to the 3 card spade fragment idea (assuming 2♠ would have been forcing).
#10
Posted 2015-September-01, 19:17
Zelandakh, on 2015-September-01, 17:09, said:
3♥ = double fit
3♠ = slam try in diamonds
3NT = natural
4♣ = starts a cue auction with diamonds agreed
4♦ = CKCB
The disadvantage is obviously that cue auctions start considerably higher than playing natural. The advantage is getting better range clarification and being able to stop in 3NT when the slam try gets rejected.
Yes.
-P.J. Painter.
#11
Posted 2015-September-02, 13:40
Works much better than minorwood in my experience.
#12
Posted 2015-September-03, 01:44
cherdano, on 2015-September-02, 13:40, said:
Works much better than minorwood in my experience.
Am I understanding you correctly? Diamonds are trumps, 4NT asks for the 5 aces, 5♣ shows any number of aces other than 2, and this works better than minorwood?
#13
Posted 2015-September-03, 02:45
mgoetze, on 2015-September-01, 08:31, said:
1♥-2♦; 3♦
We play 2♦ as forcing to game with 5+ diamonds, and 3♦ as showing "extras" - but I believe the modern interpretation of extras is "if I've got 4-card support, well, I'll have a real opening hand at least, not those ratty 10 HCP I had last time".
In other words, opener still has a huge range, and bidding 4♦ as RKCB isn't going to help me figure out whether we have 12 tricks or only 10.
Sorry but this is nonsense.
There are few experts, who would claim in slam bidding you do not need a keycard ask.
With minors there is a problem. 4NT is usually too high for that purpose.
kickback, redwood, minorwood all try to find a substitute which is lower.
Has anybody claimed keycard will solve all problems in slam bidding and is always appropriate?
You must be joking.
But keycard is much more useful than aceask because it does not only look at aces but also at trump losers.
I like minorwood because afterwards I can often suggest 4NT as a resting place, which is useful when a minor has been agreed, even more so at matchpoint. Every bidding step available below 4NT counts.
Now back to your issues that you do not know whether you have 10 or 12 tricks.
The foundation for good slam bidding is done in the early stages of bidding not in the last ones.
This generally means the information you exchange below 3NT, which is a watershed in bidding, particularly with minor suit fits.
2/1 is an improvement, but I still think people do often not make good use of the avialable bididng space they have created by forcing to game early.
For example the way I play
1♥-2♦; 3♦ shows not only 4 card diamond support it also shows an unbalanced hand.
After 2/1 opener uses the next highest bid to show minimum or (semi)balanced hands and 2NT acts as a substitute what the next highest would have shown in standard. (here 2♥ is step one and 2NT would show 6 hearts and an unbalanced hand)
So you can see I would be on much firmer ground if I would launch minorwood after 1♥-2♦; 3♦ and if I get a disappointing reply I might be able to stop in 4NT
I am not claiming my system is perfect or the only way to do it, but the principles on which it evolved are important.
Rainer Herrmann
#14
Posted 2015-September-03, 02:53
fromageGB, on 2015-September-03, 01:44, said:
No, Arend was being ironical by writing "standard" in a long-winded way and saying that is an improvement.
#15
Posted 2015-September-04, 10:05
Oct 2006: Mission impossible
Soon: Mission illegal
#16
Posted 2015-September-04, 12:06
#17
Posted 2015-September-07, 06:03
cherdano, on 2015-September-02, 13:40, said:
Thanks, this does indeed seem like a novel system - such a contrast to the major suit slam bidding recommended by luminaries like Fred G. where one partner shows serious slam interest and then failure to make a cuebid denies a control in that suit. In comparison to those easy instructions, this seems like a black art, but perhaps one that is worth learning all the same. Do you have a recommendation which of the arcane incantations (4♦ trump cue or 4♦ waiting) is more suitable for novices?
-- Bertrand Russell
#19
Posted 2017-August-18, 21:37
Seriously, however, I think that Key-card Gerber is quite a good idea for non-experts. We can use it for all slam purposes, but especially for minor suit slams. We can agree to employ the usual step responses (0/3, 1/4, 2, 2+Q) and follow-ups.
We can adopt simple rules: 4♣ is always Key-card Gerber if it possibly can be. Also it agrees the obvious suit. Of course, we must define "obvious"
Standard minorwood uses up 2 bids but an advantage of Key-card Gerber is that we only have one bid to write-off and remember. It also allows us to check up on key-cards at the cheapest convenient level.
Either convention starts at a low enough level, for more sophisticated partnerships to define a system of follow-up asking bids,
#20
Posted 2017-August-19, 03:51
nige1, on 2017-August-18, 21:37, said:
Instead of having to agree/define the obvious suit, maybe it's better to play 4♣ as a puppet to 4♦ followed by 4x+2 as a parity key-card ask in x with continuations
4x+3 = even number of key cards in x
...4x+4 = xQ ask
......5x = no xQ
......[5x+1]+ = xQ
4x+4 = odd number of key cards in x, no xQ
5x = odd number of key cards in x, xQ
?