msjennifer, on 2020-February-26, 01:31, said:
Sir,having a glance at your bidding sequence is it not STRANGE that the spade suit was never ever mentioned ! And if the opening was 1C then how come the response was 1D ?All in all it appears to be a strange
system. Leaving it all alone I must admit that even playing a strong club system or a standard system we will never ever bid 7D as we just can not count to 13.One can never make if the spades break 4-0 as you have seen earlier.Although one can easily see that a safety play in spade suit will ensure 12 tricks in 6S how can one know the presence of a Jxx with N and the most important EIGHT of spades in S hand ?In a contract of 7D there is the possibility of a spade ruff on the opening lead itself.One easily sees the SJ in the diagram but not in real life bidding.!.All said we shall stop in 6S as its an IMP event and in 6NT when it is MP scoring.How one reaches these contracts and that too easily has been amply discussed by all others.I have to admit even any contract either 6S or 7D go down by replying that either opponent "may"hold QJ109 of spades or diamonds may break 5-0.But in a broad sense practically every pair may bid 6NT OR 6S as per their mood and methods.THANKS
Hehe, yeah, 1
♦ is a Game-Forcing reply. I think the meanings of the bids are all highlighted on the post, and you can hover them to see their meanings. We play Canape in this sequence, so, South will introduce the shorter suit of a two-suited hand first. After my 3
♦ raise, which is simultaneously a cue-bid showing the A or K of
♦, possibly both, we've agreed a 4-4 or better fit, and we're no longer interested in finding a different fit, 4-4 fits are just simply better a significant majority of the time. We'd usually start cue-bidding, but this is a key-card auction from South's perspective.
As for the likelihood of these slams making, the odds are too good to pass up. Defenders make mistakes far too often, or the correct play is simply not the winning play. If one only played slam when it made 100% of the time, they'd be an incredibly mediocre bridge player. 5-0 diamond break, or a 4-0 spade break when the player with 4 spades is on lead are just incredibly unlikely occurrences. The player on lead also has to find a spade lead, in this case, in an auction where spades were never mentioned, and from a rather lackluster suit. Players will tend to make passive leads (usually correctly) against slams, and grands especially.
So, I'd say, if your small slam is about 60% to make, you should play it, and if your grand slam is about 75-80% to make, you should play it. Possibly more aggressively than that. Although at IMPs, it really just depends on the state of the match.