RKCB: first answer 5[Cl]/5[Di] and next step.
#21
Posted 2019-September-28, 15:47
#22
Posted 2019-September-30, 07:54
pescetom, on 2019-September-28, 15:47, said:
Another thing that can be added here (and you are right to talk about the declarative mechanism) is that, while in the classic RKB, once the opener has reported the presence of all the Keycards and the request of the Kings is started, the answer is always in the cheapest King under the level of trump. While with the re-interrogation it is foreseen also the simultaneous signaling of two Kings (with a series of predetermined answers slightly different from the usual). As for the hands to post, I do not find it very useful to have only a few (which is a little difficult to find), since the discussion (which is not limited to what has been said so far) has been set in a theoretical way to verify its compatibility.
#23
Posted 2019-October-01, 01:41
#24
Posted 2019-October-03, 09:37
#25
Posted 2019-October-03, 10:20
- It's not a particularly great grand. South would want North to have one of the HK/CK to make it laydown. As it is, you need to either play for a dummy reversal, or a heart/club squeeze against West. Either could fail with E/W cards modified/swapped, and one can easily go down if you don't guess what layout to play for.
- Some people would play kickback and be able to ask with 4H after diamond agreement. Heart opening is weird though unless playing British Acol style 4 cd M weak NT methods. That's what you get when comparing auctions from today vs 68 years ago.
- If playing kickback you get to ask 4H, partner bids 5nt, 5c is the Q ask, and you get all the info (DQ no side kings) at 6d level. Or maybe at 5H level if you swap responses around to really optimize space.
- With your method, you still had to bid 6c to disambiguate. Supposedly you have 6d as have DQ but not side K. What if partner had HK but not DQ? He can't give same answer, can he? So then you are committing to grand without DQ, which is terrible. You really want to find out if all keycards + DQ and a side K without committing beyond 6d.
#26
Posted 2019-October-03, 13:06
Stephen Tu, on 2019-October-03, 10:20, said:
- It's not a particularly great grand. South would want North to have one of the HK/CK to make it laydown. As it is, you need to either play for a dummy reversal, or a heart/club squeeze against West. Either could fail with E/W cards modified/swapped, and one can easily go down if you don't guess what layout to play for.
Quote
In fact, Schenken chose a game line that included both eventualities, ending for a dummy reversal - Some people would play kickback and be able to ask with 4H after diamond agreement. Heart opening is weird though unless playing British Acol style 4 cd M weak NT methods. That's what you get when comparing auctions from today vs 68 years ago.
- If playing kickback you get to ask 4H, partner bids 5nt, 5c is the Q ask, and you get all the info (DQ no side kings) at 6d level. Or maybe at 5H level if you swap responses around to really optimize space.
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The kickback convention, being basically artificial or not being able to be chosen by the couple, is not included in the discussion. - With your method, you still had to bid 6c to disambiguate. Supposedly you have 6d as have DQ but not side K. What if partner had HK but not DQ? He can't give same answer, can he? So then you are committing to grand without DQ, which is terrible. You really want to find out if all keycards + DQ and a side K without committing beyond 6d.
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It is true that 5NT (or 6♣as a substitute) serves to eliminate ambiguity (which had not already been solved previously or if the player does not go for the grand slam) and I agree that the example is not really suitable because with the King (6 ♥) in this case, we would go further but the hand was used only for the declarative phase up to the small slam. The first answer (5 ♥, 5 ♠, 5NT) nonetheless provides indications on the presence or absence of honors with the answer while the re-interrogation, which has prerogatives for use, is a function of the response (changing, therefore, the scale of the answers).
(The three quote, in rose colored, and "It is true that ..." are mine replay to Stephen Tu)