Posted 2022-May-31, 23:01
For me, but not I think for everyone who has posted here, this is no better than an average splinter and the 4H cue, which I and several others felt was clear for responder, hurts this hand. Our heart King is not pulling its weight. I therefore have, imo, no reason to bid as if I held a maximum splinter.
An important principle is never to bid the same values twice. Partner did not take control (yes, I know that when the hand was played, partner bid a horrendous 4N): he bid (or should have bid) 4H.
4H says, at the time it was bid, that ‘I have some interest in slam but for now I’m trying to elicit cooperation, rather than taking charge. I have a stiff (far more common than a void) heart. How does that mesh with your hand?’ Note that it’s only because opener is looking at the AK of hearts that he knows the cuebid is shortness, but the king would be almost as good opposite many splinters where opener held Axx, as one example, as would be a stiff….the stiff is better because that would increase the chances of responder having decent trump and maybe the diamond queen. But since opener does have the heart AK, he now has to evaluate his hand in light of the stiff opposite…how does that information impact slam chances?
The answer is: not very well. So this hand, with its weak trump holding and the debatable heart king isn’t worth more than 4S. 4S doesn’t say ‘I didn’t have my splinter’: it says ‘I have my game force raise with short clubs but nothing special’. Responder is allowed to bid again, but with his actual hand would pass in a flash.
As Arend wrote, opener might have a 20 count…or maybe my example KQJx Axx AKJxx x….in which case he has ‘extras’ that the 4C bid did not fully disclose, then he would move to slam after the 4H expression of interest. But with the actual hand, bidding past 4S over 4H would be bidding the same values twice.
Collaborative slam bidding is an area in which experts significantly outperform average players, precisely because they understand that these auctions are dialogues, and they know how to listen to what partner is saying. Using keycard here, by responder, shows an inability or an unwillingness to converse.
Finally, and along the lines of bidding as dialogue, 4H was not a strong slam move. It said only that responder can see that slam might be good opposite a good splinter.
Once a gf has been established, cuebid below game are not by themselves slam moves…they merely say: we’re going to game. I have more than a minimum….here’s some information to help you evaluate. Both partners cue bid below game if they each feel the same way…then, by the time game is reached, each partner has usually been able to cuebid at least once….thus each partner has an idea of how the hands mesh. But whichever partner, if either, drives beyond game has to have either significant as yet not fully shown values or has a hand that’s grown up due to the cuebids already made. Note that it is a terrible but common mistake to use keycard at this point to try to get to slam. Keycard is used to try to stay out of slam! Or to reach a grand. If you don’t yet know that you have the values to take 12 tricks, you shouldn’t keycard. Keycard is because you can have the values for 12 tricks but have two losers…keycard tells you that and allows you to stay out of slam.
Here, responder has no way of thinking ‘we can take 12 tricks so long as we’re not off two keycards or one and the trump queen’. So he shouldn’t use keycard.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari