Valardent, on 2012-May-19, 03:43, said:
one could bid on 3NT :
a) 5♥
b) 4♦ followed by 5♥
c) 4♣ (if response is 4 red) followed by 5♥
What message/ask would u assess to each sequence?
I forgot about these ones.
C is easy when partner responds 4
♦: it's signoff, partner doesn't have enough Q-points (4
♥ would be relay, so 5
♥ is signoff).
When partner responds 4
♥ however, we could pass, so 5
♥ can be used for other purposes. But this is so rare that I wouldn't make any agreements here and leave this option meaningless.
Now that we had the easy ones, let's continue with A & B. These usually are both meaningless, so we can give them some kind of purpose.
For the record: if you have 7 different slam-going options (4
♣, 4
♥, 4
♠, 4NT, 5
♣, 5
♦, 5
♥) when the exact distribution is known, then 5
♥ is already defined. However, most people have only 1 or 2 Q-point/control asks, and 4 RKC's, so usually you have 5 or 6 slam actions. So lets suppose 5
♥ isn't defined.
- If you think it's useful not to go through all the steps to search for grand slam, then, in accordance with the principle of fast arrival, you can define A to small slam invite and B to grand slam invite (forcing) based on
♥ quality.
- Personally I don't think it's useful investigate grand slam this way when you have other tools available. So you can basically use A & B both for small slam investigation based on
♥ suit quality. Perhaps one when holding the J, one without the J. In accordance with the principle of fast arrival, you can use A to ask for 2 top honors +
♥J (or 3 top honors), and B to ask for 2 top honors.
I just hope you and your partner can remember these agreements after a few years when they finally come up.
"It may be rude to leave to go to the bathroom, but it's downright stupid to sit there and piss yourself" - blackshoe