gnasher, on 2011-August-30, 07:39, said:
The idea of bidding Exclusion when you have the ace of the suit is hardly a new one, and it doesn't have to be as unusual as Jeffrey's example. West might choose to bid 4♠ with something like Ax KQxxxxx x Qxx, hoping to talk LHO into the wrong lead if opener had some mundane hand like xxx Axx Axx KJ10x.
What would be the wrong lead against 5H when partner has the mundane Kx Jxxx KQx KJxx? Bidding 4S on your example hand is a recipe for disaster, but then you knew that. And we select LAs based on the methods of this partnership. We don't know exactly what they are, but the methods are surely that 4S shows a void, and asks for key cards outside spades. If West chooses to make up Exclusion, then that is not a hand-type that East should consider.
But far more important than whether Pass of 5H is an LA, is the issue that nobody seems to be addressing. Is it not overwhelmingly likely that the BIT was caused by South asking and West answering, rather than West thinking what to do when he thought he was off two key cards?
And on the other point, the glossary gives a briefer definition than the original article. Out of 20 definitions of Exclusion Blackwood I found on the net, 18 of them mentioned the void in the suit, which is the generally agreed understanding of the term. Surely, West, an expert, would have given full disclosure that it did not necessarily show a void, if that had been the case. Are you saying that you would bid Exclusion with that hand with Ax of spades, and not then tell the opponent this was a possible hand type?
A selection of definitions from the net:
A slam-related Jump bid after partner's have found a trump fit. The Jump Suit shows a void,
A better way to resolve this dilemma is to use EXCLUSION KEYCARD BLACKWOOD (EKB) whereby you ask partner for keycards OUTSIDE of the void suit.
Blackwood is typically a jump to 5 of a suit to ask about aces of keycards no counting the ace of the suit bid, presumably because the one asking is void in the suit.
Traditionally when you have a void and are looking for slam, bidding Blackwood - asking for aces or controls � is considered not to be the best approach
The concept behind this convention is to show a void while exploring for the possibility of a slam.
A better method is to use certain high level jumps in a new suit as both showing a void and asking for key cards at the same time.
Exclusion Blackwood (also known as Voidwood) is a variation on Blackwood, for use in distributional hands. When the Blackwood bidder has a void in a suit and trump suit is agreed upon, a jump to 5 of a different suit shows a void in that suit and asks for the other three aces
“Exclusion” Blackwood or “Voidwood” was devised so as to resolve the situation when the Blackwood-asker has a void.
Exclusion blackwood is not 4NT ace asking bid. Blackwood'er use his void as an ace asking bid.
The bid of 4 spades says partner, I have a void in spades and I want to know specifically the keycards in the other three suits.
It says “Tell me about your Key Cards, but don’t bother to include the A♥ in your answer, I don’t need that card”. Yes, the suit in which we leaped so majestically is the excluded suit, and the normal assumption is that the Exclusion bidder is void in that suit … either that, or he is being tricky!
EXCLUSION BLACKWOOD
•Void-showing, asks for key cards excluding the void suit.
When a player wishes to learn about controls in his/her partner's hand, yet the player's own hand contains a void, information about aces may be worthless, because the partner may have an ace in the void suit. To compensate for the void while requesting controls, the player makes a jump past 4 of agreed suit.
It is clear that if the agreemnent is that "Exclusion Blackwood" does not have to contain a void in the bid suit, this must be disclosed to the opponents, as the phrase "Exclusion Blackwood" on its own would otherwise convey MI.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar