Winstonm, on May 12 2008, 09:40 PM, said:
Another Jacoby 2NT Hater!!!
(Jacoby 2NT = Gerber???)
Same objection -- different reason, though. Again, my feeling is that Jacoby 2NT works best when the person using that tool wishes to ask questions (as Jacoby 2NT is an asking bid) and has Ace-and-spaces, not Quacks. This time (as opposed to another thread), the reason is similar -- with Quacks, you want the chance to show where these cards are (tell, rather than ask). Two side Queens -- bid 2/1.
This set of hands works, again, quite well with a (normal?) natural/cuebidding approach:
1
♠-P-2
♣(yep! could be short)-P-
2
♦(could be short)-P-2
♠(spades agreed)-P-
2NT (not two of the top three spades)-P-3
♦(not two of top three clubs, one of top three diamonds)-P-
3
♥(heart 1st/2nd control)-P-4
♣(not two of top three spades, not serious interest, one of top two clubs)-P-
4
♦(remaining two of top three diamonds)-P-4
♥(complementary heart top card -- not LTTC because not serious)-P-
???
Opener can visualize a possible
♠A,
♥A,
♦Q,
♣A and nothing more. That would be just about enough for a fair slam (trumps are still dubious). Opener has two options.
First (my choice), Opener could "decline" the slam by bidding 4
♠. This is a strange sequence. When one partner has made a courtesy cue (4
♣), denying serious slam interest thereby, and then when the other person makes a cuebid two below trumps (4
♦, two below 4
♠), which only occurs in this sequence at first analysis, then a cue by the non-serious person of the next-up suit (4
♥) is the only positive showing available below game. As that positive showing cannot be the cause for discouragement to his partner (it can, but it is too rare to care about), that positive cannot yield a true "sign off" by his partner. Hence, 4
♠ by Opener, strangely, would be a "Last Train" type of bid, suggesting the need for something else. That "something else" is, as always, contextual. The context here seems to perhaps be some help in trumps (everyone has denied good trumps, diamonds are known to be solid, etc.), although an equally plausible and probably more reasonable assessment is whether the club control is the Ace or King. Either works, though. Responder has only the club King and not even a single top trump, so he quickly passes.
That option may be too weird for some. The easier option for Opener may be to just ask. 4NT yields a 1 or 4 answer, and Responder cannot have 4 (he denied two top spades, and he is non-serious).
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.
1♠-2N*,
4♦-4♥,
4N-5♦,
6♦-(X)-6♠-(P),
P-(X)-All pass