gnasher, on 2013-August-17, 02:28, said:
That's not true. There are two possible ways to treat this sequence:
(1) The auction is solely a discussion of controls. We always get to slam when the controls are sufficient, and we always stay out of slam when the controls are deficient.
(2) The auction is a discussion of controls and suitability. We stay out of slam when the controls are sufficient but neither partner has enough to insist on slam. We occasionally reach slam when the controls are deficient but one partner has enough to insist on slam.
I understand why you prefer the certainty of (1) to the ambiguity of (2), but in this sequence where both hands can have a wide range of shapes it seems better to be playing (2).
I fully agree with your whole post, except for the last sentence (and the first
). Opener has accurately limited his hand in strength and distribution (18-19 hcp 2=4=4=3, 3=4=4=2, 4=4=3=2 or 2=4=5=2). That makes it clear that responder has decided to go to slam... unless there is a problem with the controls. Suitability doesn't come into play because responder has already decided that the hands were suitable for slam.
When both hands are unlimited then suitability should also be investigated (your approach 2). In an uncontested auction it should not be necessary to start doing that at the five level, though.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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