gszes, on 2018-September-04, 05:30, said:
North failed to take into consideration just how much better their hand was compared to what a minimum 3h raise would look like. Imagine xxx xxxx Kxx Kxx would YOU raise to 3h in this bidding? If so, how much better is your hand now that south has made a slam try and shown the club ace (surely they are not short in both spades and clubs). I would not stop below the 5 level with this hand so for now I make my cheapest cue bid 4d and if partner tries to sign off in 4h I bid 5c. If I had 2 small diamonds instead of a singleton I would have bid 5c immediately. Do not feel too badly though because the opps put a lot of pressure on your bidding and 4h is hardly the worst place to play.
I wouldn't raise to 3H on that xxx xxxx Kxx Kxx hand: I think that doing so is needlessly aggressive. One thing that many aggressive bidders forget, in competition, is that partner is still there. It would be virtually impossible that we can make game and that partner will pass out 2S or not double 3S should rho stick that bid in. Of course, one needs to pass smoothly, or else partner will be constrained on borderline hands.
Bidding this flat 6 count as if it were a decent 9 count means that opener must frequently pass and miss a game when you hold a real 3H raise or, more likely, overbid to a hopeless game. Too many players feel that they have to make all the partnership decisions.
Of course, having said that, North has a clear 4
♦call after that magical 4C cue by partner. Even absent the cue, responder has a good inference that partner has a spade stiff (or unlikely void), and the cuebid, which is a slam move, makes no sense at all if opener has two spade losers.
So we are already picturing good hearts and the club Ace, with a stiff spade. Should partner hold the diamond Ace, then slam is very good.
4D sends that message, along with showing either 1st or 2nd round control. Now, this could mislead partner, who might be looking at the diamond King, but even so there should be 5-level safety because of our 4th trump and our long, good, clubs. Keycard will resolve the diamond Ace issue.
Getting back to your first point, about how good this hand is compared to a minimum, in my view this is not, at the time we bid 3H, a very good raise. We have the death holding in spades, and our hearts are weak and we hold no aces.
However, this hand is a prototypical example of how an auction can cause us to significantly change our view of a hand. While our spade holding was a negative over 2S, it has become a huge plus after the raise and partner's cue bid. We have no wastage and we are certain that partner has spades controlled. Meanwhile the club suit, that was of uncertain value (picture partner with xxx and the club Ace almost surely offside) has exploded in value, to be worth at least 4 tricks most of the time and often 5, and of course our stiff diamond is great as well, since for partner to be slamming he almost surely has something there.
While the hand is of some 'interest', I would have suggested posting this in the I/A forum for these reasons: it is a wonderful instance of how to think during an auction.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari