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Cue bid after preempt


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Depends. Lots of things are playable.

 

If 4 and 4 each show that minor and spades, then the usefulness of 3 as Michaels decreases (or if Roman Jumps are used). 3 could then be a classic strong takeout with first-round heart control (weird) or maybe inviting 3NT if Responder has a stop (typically semi-gambling).

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I'm used to playing 4m as leaping Michaels and the direct cue as a strong (solid) 1-suiter, ostensibly asking for a stopper, but you're not always going to pass 3NT from partner. That is, you could have higher aspirations than just game.
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Over a weak 2, it is quite common to play 4m as leaping Michaels (that minor plus unbid major) and the cuebid as showing a decent hand with a long running suit (aka stopper ask).

This is what I would expect playing with a strong player and we hadn't discussed this sequence.

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I'm with Harald but a random p is more likely to take it as michaels, I think

I agree with Harald and would believe that at least 90 % of my pick upd pds will understand it this way too.

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I'm with Harald but a random p is more likely to take it as michaels, I think

A 'random' pick up partner in my environment would take it as stop ask without any discussion. What I should expect elsewhere I don't know. Playing with a high level partner I'd expect stopper ask and leaping Michaels to be standard.

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I'd also say that leaping Michaels and "stopper ask" (should be a better term for that) is standard.

We call it (the 3-level cue bid) the "Western Cue Bid" i.e. the stopper-asking bid. I believe the "Eastern Cue Bid" shows a stop rather than asks for one. This is discussed somewhere in Root & Pavlicek.....

 

WQB comes up with some regularity but needs partnership discussion as to when it applies, i.e. distinguish situations where partner has OPENED: 1 by partner (opening), 2 overcall, then 3 by me. In our methods, the cuebid is a raise.

 

Or where partner has overcalled: 2 opening by the dealer on my left, partner overcalls 2; after a pass by my RHO, I bid 3. Again, we play CARLOS(Cuebids Are Raises, Limit Or Stronger) here.

 

Regular Michaels would be a weird interpretation imo and certainly not part of the Michaels convention description; Leaping Michaels works pretty well and would be advanced standard, imo.

Edited by ralph23
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I'd also say that leaping Michaels and "stopper ask" (should be a better term for that) is standard.

We call it (the 3-level cue bid) the "Western Cue Bid" i.e. the stopper-asking bid.

You missed my point. There are auctions where the name "stopper ask" is justified, for example:

 

1D - (1S) - 2D - (2S)

3S

 

Here the 2D bidder should (virtually) always bid 3NT with a stopper.

 

However (2) - 3 is not so much an asking bid as a showing bid: it shows a very good hand with a long strong minor (usually). It is not unlikely that responder will choose not to bid 3NT with a stopper, for instance to search for slam.

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