pbleighton, on Mar 19 2006, 06:44 PM, said:
"I disagree: 4N would be to play."
Well, you could have told us that
In that case I agree with 5S - mild slam try.
Peter
How could 4N be RKC? there is no fit agreed. And opener might be in misfit with 3 spades and 2 diamonds.
I've to say that the 2
♣ showing a single-suit (which is quite an unusual defense against NT, at least here in Australia) proved to be quite annoying.
Anyway, forgetting our agreements and anyway assuming that 4N is to play, I might accept without problem a 5
♣ last train, with no certainty on the final strain (advancer denial or acceptance are in any case in diamonds, and opener passes or corrects).
5
♥ (which bypasses diamonds) can only be a strong acceptance of spades; and 5
♠ - by default - is a mild slam try.
However, at the table pard bid 5
♠, which, IMHO, is the correct bid with his hand.
At the table, I passed 5
♠: IMHO, my hand is not much better than a minimum for the my auction, and the spades lack intermediates. There was a 3rd tactical reason: this was the 9th and final board of the last match of a Swiss team event, and the other hand were pretty good [we lost 13 IMPs on this hand, but still won the match by 21 IMPs]. Calling a possibly risky slam was not the best of tactics.
Obviously in the other room they called the slam (in NT!!). Lead heart, taken in the balanced hand; Q
♠ for the finesse, not covered, and J
♠ without the least doubt. 6N made (below chances: you need not to loose both finesses, but then even if one finesse wins you must find the T in the suit; and both diamonds and spades must break). Bad luck: after seeing the cards, I was relieved not being in slam.
The position in spades is interesting: W should never cover, even with the doubleton K, unless he has exactly KT; and E should drop the 8 in any case.
1N-(2C)*-3D**-(P)-3N-(P)-4S***-(P)-?
*: single suiter (unknown)
**: natural and forcing
***: natural