mikeh, on 2023-May-09, 13:45, said:
Brilliant. Partner shows I keycard. Now what?
Yes, partner might show two keycards so that slam isn’t down off the top as they cash two or more clubs. How many diamonds does he have? Before you rush to say six, what should he bid over your 1S with Kx QJxx KQJxx Jx? If 1N,then ok…he should have 6+ diamonds and you don’t need the queen.
To me, the auction looks ok so far and now don’t I have the world’s easiest 4D call?
Now, to be fair, much depends on methods. If your partnership doesn’t know how to bid minor slams without keycard, so be it.
I assume you are replying to my "otherwise" worst case of bidding 4
♣ Kickback over 2
♦. If so, you are reading either selectively or distractedly - it was only for (the two) partners who can bid the Kickback but have no idea about control-bidding. This is the kind of compromise people playing in a small club have to make sometimes, if they want to play at all
It's obvious that getting opener to show some shape and then control-bidding is a superior approach, nobody asserted otherwise.
Having said that, bidding such a low Kickback is crude and imperfect but far from hopeless, given the space available below 5
♦. If partner shows 1 Keycard (must be
♦K) and then has
♦Q (as the auction suggests) then we will get to know about
♣K below game (and if he has
♠Kx plus
♣x then he might take a view). If he has a black void then he can show it. It's unlikely we will do anything worse than bid the small slam when a grand is possible or certain, which at MP with these HCP on the line may still be no real problem, especially if we play the cards better than others.