How many keys do you show
#1
Posted 2014-July-17, 21:26
#2
Posted 2014-July-17, 21:34
#3
Posted 2014-July-17, 21:59
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#4
Posted 2014-July-18, 00:26
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2014-July-18, 02:19
#6
Posted 2014-July-18, 02:42
If he has seven to the king it probably doesn't matter since he won't bid seven missing ♥Q anyway. Or maybe he would? We could have three heart or the queen or the finesse could work.
Obviously if he has eight he is more likely to have the king. So showing two keycards is much more likely to work poorly than to work well.
I show one. If he signs off we might just be missing one ace but again, he is more likely to have ♥K and be missing the other aces.
Edit: lol, I somehow thought he had transfered rather than Stayman
It would make some sense to show two, then. It's only if p is 4-6 in the majors that the queen is not relevant.
This post has been edited by helene_t: 2014-July-18, 03:04
#7
Posted 2014-July-18, 02:57
#8
Posted 2014-July-18, 03:01
#9
Posted 2014-July-18, 03:47
Do you want to establish a meta rule whereby a limited hand shows the number of key-cards minus the ones held in the void suit?
There may be merit in this idea, but my mental capacity for disasters at the Bridge table is already on overrun.
Rainer Herrmann
#10
Posted 2014-July-18, 03:52
Edit :
If that is your agreement, I play a 3-suited method of ace asking that also counts the Q of trumps in the initial response, so that makes 3 key cards. Putting them all in one bid, when you know all 3 suits are important, gives room for a side suit Q ask when this can be important for a running suit and the 13th trick.
#11
Posted 2014-July-18, 04:38
Besides, partner could have:
♠Axx
♥AJxx
♦AKQxxx
♣-
On which he just wants a straight response.
#12
Posted 2014-July-18, 05:33
PhilKing, on 2014-July-18, 04:38, said:
Besides, partner could have:
♠Axx
♥AJxx
♦AKQxxx
♣-
On which he just wants a straight response.
I don't think he has the HAJ given that we have those.
I also can't see why one would give any other response than one key card here. We have wasted KQ so no upgrades are possible, and we don't want partner blasting grand off an ace... I will show the HQ if he asks for it, of course.
ahydra
#14
Posted 2014-July-18, 05:49
fromageGB, on 2014-July-18, 05:43, said:
How would he go about that, if that were his aim?
London UK
#17
Posted 2014-July-18, 06:57
gordontd, on 2014-July-18, 05:49, said:
If your keycard reply showed the number of keycards (out of 7, AK in each suit plus the trump Q), and you had all of them between you, then the next step could be the side Q ask.
I have 4 step responses to the side Q ask; none, lower ranking, higher ranking, both. For this to work and keep below 6♥ on the wrong reply, this hypothetical responder hand would need to hear 6♣ or lower as the keycard response. Over 6♣, 6♦ is the side Q ask, and "none" puts you in the small slam, while the hoped-for 6NT lets you bid 7♥.
I don't play this over exclusion myself, but have it as part of the 3-suited open continuations, where the bidding starts lower. If you played it over exclusion, you would probably want to have compacted responses with an assumption that when teller has opened he will have a minimum of 2 out of the 7 - he can't have 0, and 1 is unlikely in this case. Your step keycard responses here could then be 2or5, 3or6, 4or7. The bidding could go 5♣ 5♥ showing the 3 you need to make the complete set of 7, 5♠(side Q ask) 6♦(1, the higher ranking), 7♥.
#19
Posted 2014-July-18, 07:58
See if this would affect your decision. Partner's auction showed hearts and spades. Why? With just hearts he would transfer to 2♥ then use Exclusion. The fact he went through stayman then jumped to 5♣ showed a spade suit by clear implication.
Our agreement is after notrump opening (1 or 2NT), if responder shows a two suiter then uses Blackwood after a fit is found, we use SIX keycard blackwood, four aces, and the kings of the two anchor suits partner showed (this we got from Book on Keycard Blackwood years ago). Partner agreed with all of you that say to show only one keycard. I followed what I thought was our agreement to show two (spade king, and heart ace). No real problem for us, we reached the laydown 6♥ contact, partner just tanked for a week before he bid it. He was missing the diamond ACE, and probably should have asked about the heart queen to see if I could I could show the ♠K and heart queen.
If YOU HAD SUCH an agreement related to responder with two suiters, would you have shown two key cards?
#20
Posted 2014-July-18, 08:13