Posted 2012-April-05, 16:46
When you are preempted, it rarely pays, in a new partnership, to worry about grand slams.
I would have bid 6♦. Why?
Because I cannot ever count 13 tricks by bidding 4N, assuming 4N to be keycard. Now, maybe I can then bid 5N, showing all the keys, but I think it unrealistic to expect partner to ever be able to bid the grand...not in a first time partnership, unless I had not only great respect for partner but also expected him/her to have a similar degree of trust in me.
5♥ will maybe beget 5♠, but why should it? Surely N can reason that we are cuebidding in diamonds, and he won't ever show a spade suit....any spade bid by him is a cue, and while I usually bid cheapest cue rather than A before K, my view is that in most auctions in which our first cue is above game, we cue first round controls, because there is no room to clarify whether we are showing first or second round control.
So I wouldn't expect 5♥ to fetch 5♠.
As it happened, I think passing 6♥ is absolutely clear....sending the message not only that we have first round control but that we had extras for our leap to slam.
Overcaller can now, imo, choose 6♠, altho it is possible that I am being a result merchant here....I don't think so (since I wouldn't suggest 6♠ otherwise) but I hate knowing the hand.
The thought I would take from this hand is that maybe the partnership should use a form of Michaels after the 2♥ call. Since this opening is virtually unknown in ACBLand, my practice when encountering it, is to defend as if opener were showing a weak 2♥ call, and now we have either leaping michaels or 3♥, depending on partnership.
After leaping michaels, 4N should be keycard in both suits, and it is now trivial to bid the grand in spades.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari