adhoc3 Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 [hv=d=w&v=n&n=s3h9dakjt72ckj632&w=sjt98hakjt73dct54&e=s6542h62d9864cq87&s=sakq7hq854dq53ca9]399|300|Scoring: IMPWest opened 1♥. North covered by 2♦. How to bid slam?[/hv] I was sitting south playing with random partner. What happened on my table was a tragedy. 1♥--2♦----P---2♥P----3♣---P----3♠P----3NT--P----4♦P----P!----P// Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kalvan14 Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Seeing north hand, 3N is almost as surprising as the pass :rolleyes: Dunno why he refrained from bidding 4♣: I start to think that he believed S had both majors :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 How to bid slam? After 3C, bid 3S. When partner bids 3NT, set trumps by bidding 4D. So far, this sounds familiar, eh? When partner now picks 4H as RKCB for diamonds, rather than pass, you get to show your critical two keys and the queen (5D). Unless partner cannot resist his urge to pass (apparently unlikely), he should now count tricks and bid slam. If this hand came up again, with the same partner, you have an easy call. Partner apparently fears that game will not make with 6511 pattern, your preference for his 6-bagger, six losers, and your reverse. Hence, when partner did not panick and pass 1H, I'd leap to slam with a fit. :rolleyes: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robert Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Hello everyone (1H)-2D-2H*-3C-4D*-4H*-5D*-6D2H*=limit+3C=help suit game try4D*=GF4H*=Kickback(RKC 41-30)5D*=two Aces + trump Q6D Hello kenrexford I count five losers, not six. One in each major, 2 in clubs and 1 in diamonds. Regards, Robert Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joker_gib Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 3NT and pass on 4♦ are out of this world ! :rolleyes: 1♥--2♦----P--2♥P----3♣---P--3♠P----4♣--P----4♦P----4♥--P--4NTP---5♥--P--6♦ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
P_Marlowe Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Hi, to answer your question: 3S was a game force, (I voted No, but this is wrong), .... but you dont have a 3S call. 3S shows a strong suit and at least a 5 carder, and it also denies (primary) support for partners suit, ... 2H does not show support, altough most of the timeyou will have support. To make live simpler for your partner, bid 4D instead of 3S, this is clearly forward going and forcing and clarifies the trump suit. The only other alternative I see would be 3NT from your side, which would be an underbid, but only by an Ace. With kind regardsMarlowe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joker_gib Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Hi, to answer your question: 3S was a game force, (I voted No, but this is wrong), .... but you dont have a 3S call. 3S shows a strong suit and at least a 5 carder, and it also denies (primary) support for partners suit, ... 2H does not show support, altough most of the timeyou will have support. To make live simpler for your partner, bid 4D instead of 3S, this is clearly forward going and forcing and clarifies the trump suit. The only other alternative I see would be 3NT from your side, which would be an underbid, but only by an Ace. With kind regardsMarlowe I of course agree that 3♠ is just confusing and 4♦ is better but I just wanted to keep the maximum of the first auction to show how bad 3NT and the Pass on 4♦ were. Alain Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 You are right, Robert. Five losers. ;-) Hence, almost a 7D bid for this person's partner. LOL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bearmum Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Hello everyone (1H)-2D-2H*-3C-4D*-4H*-5D*-6D2H*=limit+3C=help suit game try4D*=GF4H*=Kickback(RKC 41-30)5D*=two Aces + trump Q6D Hello kenrexford I count five losers, not six. One in each major, 2 in clubs and 1 in diamonds. Regards, RobertThis was with RANDOM (rather than your regular )partner MAYBE "kickback" not an option ( as LOTS of folks [including me] ) don't play it with reg partner(cos we don't need it in our system -- not for any other reason) and certainly even if they DO know kickback would not assume it applies without specific agreement :P HOWEVER surely the 3♠ bid IS imho GAME force BTW -- had I had the N hand I would NOT have bid ONLY 2♦ -- I would bid UNUSUAL 2NT for minors ( which I would hope a pickup partner would recognise cos it's fairly 'standard' over a major opening) :P :rolleyes: BUT on the actual bidding (horrible tho it is ;)imo ) I believe 3♠ is an ABSOLUTE game force and therefore as such N should have bid 6♦ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
P_Marlowe Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Hello everyone (1H)-2D-2H*-3C-4D*-4H*-5D*-6D2H*=limit+3C=help suit game try4D*=GF4H*=Kickback(RKC 41-30)5D*=two Aces + trump Q6D Hello kenrexford I count five losers, not six. One in each major, 2 in clubs and 1 in diamonds. Regards, RobertThis was with RANDOM (rather than your regular )partner MAYBE "kickback" not an option ( as LOTS of folks [including me] ) don't play it with reg partner(cos we don't need it in our system -- not for any other reason) and certainly even if they DO know kickback would not assume it applies without specific agreement :P HOWEVER surely the 3♠ bid IS imho GAME force BTW -- had I had the N hand I would NOT have bid ONLY 2♦ -- I would bid UNUSUAL 2NT for minors ( which I would hope a pickup partner would recognise cos it's fairly 'standard' over a major opening) :P :rolleyes: BUT on the actual bidding (horrible tho it is ;)imo ) I believe 3♠ is an ABSOLUTE game force and therefore as such N should have bid 6♦ Hi, with a pickup partner,I would not even have bid 2H. Marlowe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robert Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 Hello P_Marlowe The post was, "How to bid slam?" I posted my suggested slam auction. We both agree that any reasonable bidding with this 'random' partner would not include any 'Kickback' type RKC bids. I would also not cue bid or 'jump raise' his diamonds to 'agree diamonds.' Playing with this random partner, I would sit quietly and just try to survive the ordeal. There was a '3S' bid in the actual auction and this 'random' partner managed to pass a later 'forcing' 4D bid. We again agree that the 3S bid 'should have been forcing.' Alas, what you and I and your regular partner would play is 'not' what this 'random' player apparently plays. BTW opposite this random player 'or' a regular partner, I would have overcalled 2Ds. Fairly standard bidding opposite 'this random player' is not recommended bidding. Partners often make the wrong choice holding "xx" of both minors after a 2NT bid. They would normally bid 3Cs. This hand would have problems taking major 'forces' while trying to pull trumps. The diamond suit would play better opposite "xx" type holdings. Also people tend to double less freguently when you hold a trump suit as strong as this diamond holding. The much weaker club suit is much more likely to attract a double. A regular partner of mine would expect me to overcall 2Ds and later rebid clubs. A jump to 2NT would suggest more 'even suit quality' and would also suggest a somewhat weaker hand type in my bidding 'style.' Our random partner has already been known to pass 'forcing bids' so using any conventional bids with him is not a very good idea(IMHO) I switched to RKC several decades ago. I had just bid to 6S holding 33HCP, however, there was one slight problem because the Ace and King of trumps were the missing seven HCPs. Best regards, Robert Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 One more example to just play Bergen rules. When opp open at the one level give up on slam, Just bid game and move on to next hand. Typical example where you try for very difficult to bid minor suit slam and end up in confusion, not for the first time I bet. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted December 1, 2005 Report Share Posted December 1, 2005 .--.-.-.-(1♥)2NT-3♥4♦-4♠5♣-6♦ The qustion of if 3♠ was GF is not the proper question since 3♣ is already GF. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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