JanisW, on 2018-November-27, 13:26, said:
I held the following hand this Monday and was unsure how to proceed
I went for 3
♣ (promising Q+ in
♣, kind of Help-suit-Gametry), which is forcing for us and asks Partner to bid 4
♥ with good support in clubs and settle for 3
♥ otherwise.
After my partner was able to bid 4
♥ I liked my hand even more because my QJ
♣ greatly improved in value.
I followed it up with 4
♠ after which Partner unfortunately cued with 5
♣ (I think he should have skipped the club cue in favor for the much more valuable
♦-cue. He almost is marked with a club control for the bidding so far, isn't he?)
Now I'm none the wiser and lack a bid somehow.
Should I have started differently? How would you have proceeded? Is trying for 6 too ambitious anyway?
regard
Janis
Some of the best advice on slam bidding I ever read stated that if you can picture the perfect minimum hand from partner that makes slam lay down then your hand is worth a slam try.
In your case, Qxx, Kxxx, x, AKxxx would qualify so I agree with your slam try. Having the luxury of bidding 3 clubs forcing is also nice. But what you really want to hear from partner after 3C is a 4D splinter. As long as partner denies control of diamonds that xx you hold is death.
As for your bidding, I think you might want to discuss with your partner changing meanings, after 3C, 3H should be stronger than 4H so you save room, unless you are using 3C as forcing game try. If that is the case, I would not have started with 3C but with 2S because after a 4H bid you are still guessing about diamonds.
Edit: I see in your post that 3C was a game try. In that case, I think it gets much hairier to bid 3C unless partner can still bid 4D as a splinter. If he held xxx, Qxxx, Kx, AKxxx you really don't want to be in slam and 5 could be too high.
2nd Edit: Also, IMO when trying to reach low high card slams it is important to be able to make tries below game level - to avoid the 5 level.