MinorKid, on 2020-August-02, 17:24, said:
If you don't play exclusion, you need to. Learn it and add it to your arsenal. Provided you play exclusion, I don't see a huge problem here.
The auction here ought to be simple enough. Even if you play Soloway Jump Shifts, this hand isn't really suitable. SJS ought to be based on (A) a very strong balanced hand; (B) a very strong hand with a suit that (i) will play for one loser opposite a void AND (ii) will play for no losers if partner has the A, K, or Q; or © a very strong hand with a good suit AND very good support for your partner's suit.
You have none of these. Your suit is such that if partner has a void, you can't be sure of just one loser. Worse, there is no way be sure how many losers you have in trump, because you can't ask for the Jack. A suit like AKxxxxx is much better. Now you can ask for the Queen and know exactly how many losers you have. And of course, your support for partner's suit is not nearly good enough for a SJS hand of type ©.
So you bid 1H. If partner responds 2D, you can either (A) launch exclusion with 5C (same as before) or (B) bid 2S (partner won't raise; he doesn't have four) and then over partner's D, H, or NT rebid, launch exclusion (5C will be exclusion with D as trump over a D or NT rebid, and exclusion with H as trump over a 3H rebid).
If partner responds 3D, showing six and quite a good hand, you give up on hearts, launch into exclusion (5C), find out that partner has AKd, and go to 7D. Of course, if partner has the Ac and can count 13 tricks, he can correct to 7NT. For example:
KQx void AKxxxxx Axx
In order to use exclusion, you must have the Qd (or else four of them), the As, and a source of tricks in H. So that's 3S, 7D, and 1C for 11 - surely you must have at least AKh.
Cheers,
Mike
Cheers,
Mike