How would you bid this? (Spoiler below for how I proceeded.)
Spoiler
We were by far the least experienced partnership in the field: we have each been playing for less than a year, competitively for less than six months, and have around 20 MPs between us. This was also only our second time playing together competitively.
We play 2/1 with bells and whistles, and unfortunately I had no access to Exclusion Blackwood or a similar gadget. I was 99.9% certain that partner had the ♦A, especially at unfavorable vulnerability, so I decided to ace-ask (we play RKC) and hope that he had neither the ♠A or the ♣A or both of them.
Unfortunately, partner came back showing two aces, so I had a 50/50 decision to make. 6♠ is virtually certain, so I decided to stay there and hope that some people would miss the slam.
The opening lead was the ♣A, so I made 13 tricks cold. I was very frustrated at the time, assuming that many of the stronger partnerships would find the grand slam, but this was actually a rather good board for us: only one partnership bid the grand slam, while a few partnerships were in diamonds, a few were only in 4♠, one pair was in notrump and the opponents took 5 club tricks off the top, and one partnership had a miscommunication and ended up in 5♣ down 7.
We play 2/1 with bells and whistles, and unfortunately I had no access to Exclusion Blackwood or a similar gadget. I was 99.9% certain that partner had the ♦A, especially at unfavorable vulnerability, so I decided to ace-ask (we play RKC) and hope that he had neither the ♠A or the ♣A or both of them.
Unfortunately, partner came back showing two aces, so I had a 50/50 decision to make. 6♠ is virtually certain, so I decided to stay there and hope that some people would miss the slam.
The opening lead was the ♣A, so I made 13 tricks cold. I was very frustrated at the time, assuming that many of the stronger partnerships would find the grand slam, but this was actually a rather good board for us: only one partnership bid the grand slam, while a few partnerships were in diamonds, a few were only in 4♠, one pair was in notrump and the opponents took 5 club tricks off the top, and one partnership had a miscommunication and ended up in 5♣ down 7.
Playing in a Gold Rush pairs event, I picked up the following hand:
How would you bid this?
We play 2/1 with bells and whistles, and unfortunately I had no access to Exclusion Blackwood or a similar gadget. I was 99.9% certain that partner had the ♦A, especially at unfavorable vulnerability, so I decided to ace-ask (we play RKC) and hope that he had neither the ♠A or the ♣A or both of them.