Posted 2022-May-26, 19:11
I’ve delayed answering here…my first draft some days ago was even longer than my norm😀
When considering whether to make a move, be it towards game or slam, it makes sense to mentally conjure up some non-freakish holdings for partner, compatible with the auction so far.
When the situation isn’t clear, the odds are that you’ll be able to come up with hands where making the move is clear, where it’s debatable and some where it’s too dangerous. Then you have to rely on judgement as to how much weight to give to the extremes….btw, if you currently lack judgement, this is a good way to acquire it….do the mental exercise, follow your best guess and see how it turns out. No one hand nor any small sample will be conclusive but if you consistently miss good contracts or consistently turn pluses into minuses, try to figure out why you’re often wrong. Plus, of course, seek the opinion of players who’ve proved they have fairly good judgement.
Here, my sense is that there are not many hands on which, if we make a move, partner will get us too high. Yes, we may reach the 5-level on some hands where, if the cards lie badly, we may go down, but there are, imo, a lot more hands where slam is somewhere between reasonable and virtually cold, and on which partner should be passing 4S should we make that bid.
Before going further…as is often the case style matters. In my expert partnerships we use the philosophy of invite heavy, accept light. Now most hands are in the middle and this philosophy has no impact. But here partner could have invited via 3S, knowing that I’d stretch to accept the game invitation. But he didn’t invite…he forced to game while showing at least some slam interest. Also, as is increasingly common, we respond quite light, especially if we have 5+ in our major and shortness in opener’s minor. You can’t play a style in which a response could be on 4 or even 3 hcp and have opener rebid as if your response promises 5 or 6.
So he has a good hand.
KQJx Axx AKJxx x is not the best he could have. But if we bid 4S he has to allow for a hand such as xxxxx Qxx xx KJx where we really do not want to be in 5S….and this isn’t the worst hand we could have.
QJxx AKx AJxxx x is not, for us, a gf splinter….that’s 3S bid, absolutely not a gf holding.
Btw, 4=4=4=1 hands should be bid with a slight nod to being conservative. This shape is notorious for playing poorly relative to its hcp total, so I wouldn’t splinter with, say, KJxx AKxx AJxx x
All of this means that for me this is a hand on which we have to make a move.
Again, style matters. I know of some real experts who might bid 4D here, since on many hands partner would love to hear of a diamond card. I don’t play that style, for better or worse. 4D here would be either the ace or king…..almost never shortness unless I have a lot of extras but desperately need to hear a heart cuebid. Thus I bid 4H.
If partner signs off in 4S, I think I’m done. 4H shows some slam interest…if he has my KQJx Axx AKJxx x hand, he’s driving to slam and on most (but probably not all) hands on which 6S is ‘good’ he should make another move, assuming that we have 5 level safety once I show some interest.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari