Exclusion RKB
#41
Posted 2018-September-11, 02:34
#42
Posted 2018-September-11, 03:43
#43
Posted 2018-September-11, 07:12
#44
Posted 2018-September-15, 08:07
#45
Posted 2018-September-15, 09:41
Quote
Seems standard to me.
#48
Posted 2018-September-18, 07:50
#49
Posted 2018-September-27, 10:45
#50
Posted 2018-October-03, 09:41
#51
Posted 2018-December-18, 09:50
#53
Posted 2018-December-31, 10:51
#54
Posted 2019-January-03, 03:09
EXCLUSION BLACKWOOD
You have a nice hand with a vacuum, and you have ascertained fit in a major with the hand of your partner.
Do you ask for the boards?
And what do you do with the ace in the color of your vacuum? Of course it can always be useful but it is not INDISPENSABLE to declare the slam, what you need to know is the number of useful axes, excluding the one corresponding to your vacuum.
Example, you have: ♠ .K Q J 4 2 - ♥ .A Q J 10 9 - ♦ .-- - ♣ .A 3 2.
and after your opening of 1 ♠ the partner declares 1SA and then supports you to ♥ after your jump to 3 ♥, what do you say?
N:1 ♠ 1NT, 3 ♥ 4 ♥?
south may have: 1 → ♠ .A 8 - ♥ .8 7 6 2 - ♦ .Q 10 9 8 7 - ♣ .K 2.or: 2 → ♠ .8 7 - ♥ .8 7 6 2 - ♦ .A Q 9 8 7 - ♣ .K 2.
and with the hand 1 the slam is on the table while with the 2 go down because you lose a grip to ♠ and the K ♥ (out of impasse).
How to solve the problem: ==> using the EXCLUSION BLACKWOOD, designed by Amalia Kearse and described in her "Bridge Conventions Complete", modernly reviewed by several players, (Erik Kokish).
The convention is simple: with a proven fit, A JUMP[that here there is not] TO LEVEL 5 in one suit asks for the number of axes (Key Cards) EXCLUDING THE CARDS OF THE DECLARED SUIT
The answers are stepped (aces = Key Card):
1st step0 useful axes2th step1 useful axes3th step2 useful axes4th step3 useful axes
and in the example above, the declaration of the north with the exclusion would be continued with 5 ♦, tell me how many Key Cards you have excluded ♦, so how many aces you have between these four: A ♠ - K ♠ - A ♥ - A ♣.
N: 1♠ 1NT ,3 ♥ 4 ♥, 5 ♦
This declaration is used "generally" when the void is in a minor color, if you have a vacuum at ♠ ... it is hard.This is the link:https://sites.google...usion-blackwood (interesting, take a look at the site).
#55
Posted 2019-January-16, 17:18
#56
Posted 2019-January-18, 09:21
#57
Posted 2019-January-18, 13:33
Lovera, on 2019-January-18, 09:21, said:
I'm quite happy to play the first two examples as EKCB:
1♠ - 2♣; 4♦
1♦ - 1♥; 2♦ - 4♠
I am not happy to play the third as EKCB as I do not consider splinters or weak-3 jumps "extinct":
1♠ - 4♣
#58
Posted 2019-January-19, 08:25
Quote
5♦ is a gross overbid on ♠KQJ42 ♥AQJT9 ♦--- ♣A32.
Quote
Using my gadget instead of Exclusion:
4♠ = club void or no void
4N = diamond void
5♣ = spade void and an even number of key cards
...5♦ = trump queen ask
......5♥ = denies the trump queen
......other = promises the trump queen
5♦ = spade void and an odd number of key cards, but not the trump queen
5♥ = apade void, an odd number of key cards and the trump queen
It's much harder to handle voids if they can only be shown by bidding the void suits.
#59
Posted 2019-January-19, 18:20
pescetom, on 2019-January-18, 13:33, said:
1♠ - 2♣; 4♦
1♦ - 1♥; 2♦ - 4♠
I am not happy to play the third as EKCB as I do not consider splinters or weak-3 jumps "extinct":
1♠ - 4♣
Well, I'm glad to see that someone has finally expressed. About for the jump in the second round of bidding turn, this situation is the most frequent but not the only one, as already mentioned, given that there are also other possibilities and I agree with it. Regarding the direct response EKB carried out in the first bidding turn as reported by the Canadian website is a suggestion (..if you do not play "flower bids") to be taken into consideration (while if you instead do them ..) even if the answers of interdiction somewhere must also find place.
#60
Posted 2019-January-24, 08:42