Posted 2013-July-25, 09:42
I empathize with your problem but I think that driving to slam is simply too aggressive, whether we are discussing the immediate leap to 6♣ or the alternatives espoused by some of 4N and then 6♣.
Yes, I see that 6♦ made, but it isn't a great contract, since K10xxx opposite Qxxx leaves a lot to be desired in terms of a trump suit, and even more so after an opposition pre-empt.
The 2♥ bid left you with little way of conveying the nature of the hand.
Nothing is perfect, and you don't need me to point that out, but my take on these situations is that you should pull in a little: given a choice between over aggression and over conservatism, choose the conservatism.
Here's why: if you are overly aggressive and are 'wrong' there is no hope. You are too high and partner can't take you back a level.
If you are overly conservative, then there remains some hope that partner will be able to act. IOW, the overly aggressive approach is completely unilateral and committal, while the conservative approach offers some, even tho modest, hope that partner can come through for us.
Thus I would choose 4N. This could be horrible if partner is short both minors. In that case, clubs may play better because we are unlikely to lose control in trumps, yet with 2=1 or a weak 3=2 minors, he'll put us in diamonds and we may get tapped out. However, we can't be THAT conservative with this hand. We should be assuming that we have play for some high level minor contract, else we may as well stay in bed.
I would pass partner's 5♦. Say he held xxxxx AQx AQxx x
Over 4N, he'll drive at least to slam and I would suggest he bid 5♥ as a grand slam try, tho I admit that getting to 7 isn't clear yet anyway. I mention this as an example of how choosing the conservative option doesn't end our chances of reaching a good contract.
I want to stress: the approach I am advocating applies only to choosing between two (or maybe 3) alternatives, where they lie on either side of the unattainable ideal descriptive call. I am not advising choosing conservative rather than normal, nor strongly conservative rather than mildly aggressive.
Here, it seems to me, all of your plausible choices were either overbids or underbids, with 4N being the least conservative underbid (compared to, say, 3♣ or 5♣) and 4N then slam or a direct slam as both being overbids.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari