(pass) - 1C - (pass) - 4NT
#21
Posted 2016-May-11, 08:19
In regular partnerships I play this sequence one of three ways, depending upon specific prior agreement:
a) 4 Ace Blackwood (always with a short club or strong club system);
b) quantitative (shows about a 20 count, balanced, all suits at least second round control) (how often does that happen?);
c) RKC for clubs (if opener promises 3+♣).
#22
Posted 2016-May-11, 13:40
Tryggolaf, on 2016-May-10, 05:03, said:
(pass) - 1♣ [= 2+ ♣] - (pass) - 4NT
I play RKCB but as I too play the short club I would be very wary of bidding 4NT opposite a 1♣opener unless I had great strength in the suit myself. Indeed,the final contract might not even be clubs (!)
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#23
Posted 2016-May-11, 13:59
Cyberyeti, on 2016-May-10, 13:08, said:
#24
Posted 2016-May-11, 15:10
PhilG007, on 2016-May-11, 13:40, said:
This is why normal Blackwood is the popular choice, and in fact no other interpretation would cross my mind, as any others would require prior agreement. I don't care how many clubs are promised; I would do the same over any suit opening bid.
Also I would have expected that if I had bid this with a pickup partner, that is how she would have understood it. This thread has been illuminating.
#25
Posted 2016-May-11, 23:55
If I want to know keys, I make a forcing raise first (and then bid 4♣ or 4♦ ask the keycard ask. So 4N is almost never RKB over ♣).
Quantitative for me asks partner if they have extras for their bidding. Since 1♣ can be 11 - 21 HCP, 4N certainly isn't asking partner. The range is just too big. Showing partner?? There's just no need to use up the bidding space just because I hold 20 - 21.
Specific Aces? Too small a benefit window when Ole Black is available.
Trust demands integrity, balance and collaboration.
District 11
Unit 124
Steve Moese
#26
Posted 2016-May-12, 01:51
PhilG007, on 2016-May-10, 06:46, said:
see the wheels go round. In the example given,I would pass 4NT and if partner started
remonstrating,I would just simply reply "We had no agreement on this" Time and again
I have stressed that in any pick up pairing you should strive to KEEP IT SIMPLE!!!!!!
Long ago,when I was a novice I was told that if you made a bid and partner didn't understand the
meaning of it,it was YOUR fault
This.
I didn't even vote because this 4NT is so unnecessary. If it's intended as RKC, keep it simple and set the suit with a forcing 2♣ bid first.
If intended as "quantitative," how would you expect a pick-up partner to know what range? Why not start with 1♦ and hear partner's rebid?
#27
Posted 2016-May-12, 01:53
perko90, on 2016-May-12, 01:51, said:
I didn't even vote because this 4NT is so unnecessary. If it's intended as RKC, keep it simple and set the suit with a forcing 2♣ bid first.
Precisely. This is why it is normal Blackwood.
#28
Posted 2016-May-12, 08:00
However, all of this is a deviation from the standard definition of blackwood (04,1,2,3).
However, just because you loathe your partner for making this call, don't do something like pass out of spite. You are better off assuming a certain agreement than doing something purely irrational. Spiteful actions loudly proclaim that you are more interested than being right than winning.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#29
Posted 2016-May-12, 14:03
#30
Posted 2016-May-12, 21:15
steve2005, on 2016-May-12, 14:03, said:
Maybe. I assumed that the difference was that 5NT would ask for specific kings, rather than number of kings.
Anyway, I don't understand the large vote for keycard in clubs, since you are "nearly certain" you are playing inverted minors and therefore there will be a way to establish that clubs are agreed.
#31
Posted 2016-May-12, 22:44
Why is this? First, there may be hands where responder only wants to know about Aces and Kings. For example: 1C - 4NT. Responder has:
KQJT9XX AKQ Ax x
Aren't you really just interested in how many Aces partner has? If he has none, you'll sign off at 5S. If he has one, you'll bid six spades. If he has two, you'll ask for Kings and bid 7NT if he has one.
OK, but what if you want to play with opener's suit as trump and want to use RKC? Well, you don't have to bid 4NT immediately. Just make a forcing raise to set trump (e.g., inverted minor raise for C or D; Jacoby 2NT for H or S). Then you can bid keycard later on. If you tell me you don't have a forcing raise, then you need to change your system so that you do (any system that doesn't have a forcing raise available is nutty).
#33
Posted 2016-May-14, 00:17
neilkaz, on 2016-May-13, 13:43, said:
"Old" is right Simple Blackwood nowadays is considered to be a crude museum piece,
crashing down with one blunt question and one equally blunt answer. The modern ways
in slam investigation are RKCB and cue bids.
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#34
Posted 2016-May-14, 08:57
PhilG007, on 2016-May-14, 00:17, said:
crashing down with one blunt question and one equally blunt answer. The modern ways
in slam investigation are RKCB and cue bids.
if I'm building a table, sometimes I don't want a compound mitre saw. Occasionally a handsaw is the *right* tool for the job.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#35
Posted 2016-May-14, 11:07
PhilG007, on 2016-May-14, 00:17, said:
crashing down with one blunt question and one equally blunt answer. The modern ways
in slam investigation are RKCB and cue bids.
Assuming "modern ways in slam investigation," regular old Blackwood is standard here and shows a more advanced understanding of when RKCB applies and equally as important . . . when it does not apply.
#36
Posted 2016-May-14, 16:28
Playing with a weaker player, I'd assume it was RKCB for clubs.
#38
Posted 2016-May-18, 08:03
#39
Posted 2016-May-18, 15:49
Now it seems you can use it...as long as certain criteria was satisfied.
I'd like to know more as the two statements seem to be conflicting.
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#40
Posted 2016-May-18, 17:55
PhilG007, on 2016-May-18, 15:49, said:
Now it seems you can use it...as long as certain criteria was satisfied.
I'd like to know more as the two statements seem to be conflicting.
Well, you can use exclusion.