Posted 2008-June-03, 12:44
Hands like this are interesting. This one, particularly so because the club suit is Qxxx. The analysis of Kxxx or Axxx is more complicated because of the value of two red Kings from Opener. I'll leave that alone for a second.
The key here is on deciphering partner's contribution as to club length and as to the critical missing cards, namely the AK of clubs and the spade Queen. Also critical to this is tactics and systemic agreements that prefer major-oriented auctions over minor-oriented auctions, to a degree.
Keeping these concerns in mind, and although I appreciate the thinking by focusing clubs, this sequence for me is a lot easier if I focus spades, and I'll explain.
After the GF is established, I could, as mentioned, bid 3♠, settiong trumps and requesting cues. That would be tremendous, as partner's first cue option is 3NT (serious, which contextually must feature all three critical cards if red-aceless) or 4♣, which for me shows two of the top three clubs (hence, the missing A-K). Then, 4NT clarifies the spade Queen problem.
The club problem is easier if 2♦ has the default I use (show spade 3-card support before secondary hearts), because the 2♥ call, then, would guarantee four clubs. As it is, 3433 is possible, which is a problem.
Thus, after learning of the club K-Q but learning of the lack of the spade Q, 7♣ looks like the right call.
The problem, though, for the actual auction is lacking that major shape limitation, which creates the problem on this hand. So, trying 3♣ has some merits, maybe. Let's play it out, though. You bid 4♣ and find out about the club AK (when 7 is in picture). I assume that at any point one could blast some spade call to play, even after focusing clubs? But, how does one inquire as to the spade Queen?
Better is to cue 3♥. If partner cues 3♠ as I play this shows one of the top three spades (the Queen), and again the problem is solved, as to the honors ("ask" about the spades by bidding 3♥ and then kick into 4♣ RKCB planning on placing the right contract). The problem, though, is that Opener may well have three spades. I'd imagine that 2♦...3♣ is your sequence with GF club support even with only four spades, right?
In sum, then, some relativbely minor tweaking of your agreements would have great impact for cases like this. Some decent cuebidding style also resolves two-suit scenarios like this well.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.