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In a game forcing auction I am happy to bid my longest suit first, esp. if I can use the cheapest 2/1 to create a forcing auction.

I would not look for a spade game but prefer hearts. If we need discards in a long suit, we have clubs avaiable, so no need to prefera 4-4 spade game to a 5-3 heart game.

And the only suit we may need to discard are spades anyway. We can ruff diamonds. .)

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3h

 

Now it is getting tricky

 

will we be able to sort out the best trump suit....not easy.

This is a valid point. Give partner something like: X KXXXX AXX AXXX, and we probably feel good about a grand in clubs, but 6H might go down. Of course, that doesn't change the 3H bid at this point, which establishes 6 keycards and brings in the heart queen. Partner's distribution in spades and diamonds might be more difficult.

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Excellent. So far, so good. Partner cue-bids spades (which could be first round or second round control). What next?

 

In fact, I suppose you'll get to a point where you'll ask key-cards and partner will show 0-3 with 5. What then?

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Excellent. So far, so good. Partner cue-bids spades (which could be first round or second round control). What next?

 

In fact, I suppose you'll get to a point where you'll ask key-cards and partner will show 0-3 with 5. What then?

Queen ask, whatever that is for you 1430 folks who don't play Kickback. Then choose 7N if he has the heart queen, and 7 clubs if not.

 

If he had zero, instead of three, we will discuss the auction in the bar.

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Excellent. So far, so good. Partner cue-bids spades (which could be first round or second round control). What next?

 

In fact, I suppose you'll get to a point where you'll ask key-cards and partner will show 0-3 with 5. What then?

If you "asked" with 4S! = 6-ace RKC including Q but not Q, then after the 3 key card answer, you could ask for the Q BELOW 5H .

However, instead, let's make a 3rd rnd Ctrl-ask for -- something we learned in a recent thread.

 

And that is by-passing the 5 ( K-ask ) with 5NT! ( essentially, the Q-ask ) .

Replies are:

6H = no Q

7H = x x doubleton

6NT = Q

6S = Q J

 

If you get the Q reply, you can count 13 tricks in 7NT :

4s, 2h, 2d, 5c = 13

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Queen ask, whatever that is for you 1430 folks who don't play Kickback. Then choose 7N if he has the heart queen, and 7 clubs if not.

 

If he had zero, instead of three, we will discuss the auction in the bar.

 

I suppose your partner doesn't support clubs with 3 to AJ or to the AT.

 

What can go wrong if you bid 1 over 1?

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Queen ask, whatever that is for you 1430 folks who don't play Kickback. Then choose 7N if he has the heart queen, and 7 clubs if not.

 

If he had zero, instead of three, we will discuss the auction in the bar.

 

I suppose your partner doesn't support clubs with 3 to AJ or to the AT.

 

What can go wrong if you bid 1 over 1?

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In Roman Keycard Blackwood, Eddie Kantar suggests using 4m as RKB in double-agreement sequences. This gives us more room - very useful, considering we have 6 keycards plus 2 queens to deal with. If you buy into this, you'll bid 4 and the auction will proceed:

 

4 - 4 (0 or 3, obviously 3)

4 (queen-ask) - let's say 5 (3rd step = higher ranking queen; 1st = neither, 2nd = lower, 3rd = higher, 4th = both)

 

Now we know partner has something like x KQxxx Axx Axxx, assuming partner cuebid a singleton spade (he could also have the king). If you're willing to gamble on 3-2 hearts (or partner holding the jack or similar), you an bid 7NT now, or the IMP-smart 7, (1 spade, 5 hearts, 2 diamonds, 5 clubs). If you're worried about that, you can ask for kings, 5 - if partner shows the king of spades, now if you get a bad heart break you still have a spade finesse or a squeeze to fall back on - or if you don't want to risk a lot of IMPs to win a few, bid the nearly laydown 7.

 

If instead, partner shows no queens with 4NT, 7 is still pretty good (opposite x Kxxxx Axx Axxx, and you might try that. Or, you could ask for kings to see if partner cuebid shortness or the king of spades.

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Between "lots and everything " .

 

Like, for example, 2? Now you'll have to make a fancy 3 bid, which might not be natural at all... then, if partner shows 3-card spade support, you'll have to bid 4 to show your support (true, this shows more than if you had raised to 4 directly, but partner might not be able to make an intelligent decision about whether or not slam is good).

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Nothing can go right when you have longer clubs than spades, game forcing values, and heart support and respond 1S. You have started to show nothing, and will spend the next 2 rounds of bidding in confusion...still not having shown what you have.
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Nothing can go right when you have longer clubs than spades, game forcing values, and heart support and respond 1S. You have started to show nothing, and will spend the next 2 rounds of bidding in confusion...still not having shown what you have.

 

That is incorrect if you are playing a Mafia style of responses. However you need to have agreed this and know your followup responses of course.

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