PhilKing, on 2013-July-17, 11:51, said:
I might be being a bit thick, but I would bid 4♦ and then GSF on the next round. 6♣ over 5NT then shows the A or K.
For me, 5♣ is a natural picture bid. ♠xx♥AKJxx♦xx♣KQxx would fit the bill, and there is certainly nothing whatsoever to suggest it is not "fast arrival" with different agreements. We bid 2♠ to expore for other strains, and hearing 3♦ we settle for the minor-suit game.
5♣ gets minus infinity.
what if you didn't have that agreement?
I do, btw, in my serious partnerships, but it seems fair to assume that the OP didn't, else why the question.
I think it is simply wrong for any of us to post an answer to a question stating only that one has a method that makes the problem trivial. It can be helpful to explain one's method of avoiding or solving the problem, using an agreement, but my suggestion is that one should always, in addition, strive to answer the question within the context in which it was posed.
Answering as cyber did with 'use 5
♥ as gsf' or as you did 'set diamonds and use a graduated GSF scheme' is unlikely to help the OP in analyzing what he or she did at the table. Yes, it suggests that the partnership should look at other possibilities, so it can be helpful in the long term but, no, it doesn't assist those (the OP and other readers) who wrestle with the problem as presented and, presumably, as faced at the table.
I would add that while I advocated 5
♣, and get a score of minus infinity for doing so, I would not have done so had I the option of setting trump and using gsf. Indeed, my argument was that partner SHOULD work out that 5
♣ is exclusion precisely because our methods seem to lack any other rational way of dealing with this hand. Had we a rational alternative, because we played as either you or cyber suggest, then that argument fails and the 'natural, weaker than 4
♣' or 'picture bid' alternatives become more plausible.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari