Cyberyeti, on 2020-February-04, 14:13, said:
What do they think 2♠-X-4♠-4N or 2♠-X-4♠-P-P-X-P-4N mean ?
If I asked any of them, I would get a look of total confusion and stunned silence.
They have not developed the ability to logically deduce what bids mean in situations that have not been covered in their lessons. I reckon there are some intermediate players at my club that wouldn't have a clue what 4NT meant in those situations. I know what it means because I came across it years and years ago (not in a table situation), and it has stuck in my mind.
Many of the novices are barely able to apply fundamental bidding concepts, several of them use crib sheets and they try to remember what to do by remembering rules. Hence, when I get asked for help/guidance, I try to work with them through it in logical steps, steps small enough they can grasp each one, and then when we get to the answer it dawns on them for at least a moment. If I can, I leave them with a pointer or two as to how to work these things out when partner or opponents bid in a way that makes their next move not immediately obvious.
For teaching of any concept, it takes repetition, and repetition, and repetition, and repetition, and repetition, and even then, they don't always get it because some of them only turn up to the novice evening once a week and play 15 hands, they can't practice application of theory and grasp it with such little time playing (which I think is why many of them historically stay novices forever).
I do love them, even if teaching them something new can take a long time.
AL78 "The novices at my club have taken on board the workshop advice of bidding to the level of the fit, making slam very hard to find for NS on this board. There were only three tables, the scores were 4♠EX-3, 5♠E-4, and 5♣N=. One of the auctions. NS have a slam on in three suits, although the club slam requires declarer to play to the jack, losing to the queen, then the king comes down under the ace. I couldn't think of a way for NS to get to any slam with the EW barrage. What do you think? I did suggest to the first pair that one of them really should have whacked the 5♠."
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EW made it hard for NS to reach any slam. IMO ...
Over East's 2♠, I rank ...
1. Double = T/O. Reasonable. If you play same-level conversion then, over partner's 5♣ bid, the 5♦ bid shows the red-suits.
2. 3N = NAT. Practical bid.
3. 3♦ = NAT. Risky underbid.
4. 4♦ = ART. Leaping Michaels. Red-suits 5+5+. Bypasses 3N and exaggerates ♥s.
Over West's 4♠, I rank ...
1. 4N = ART. Brave. 2 or more places to play.
2. 5♣ = NAT. Brave and unilateral.
3. Pass = NAT. Close decision,
4. Double = ART. "Action"/"Cards"/"Responsive" but emphasis on penalty, at this level
Over West's 5♠, South should double.