Antrax, on 2011-September-12, 00:10, said:
Interesting, thanks. I was sure I read somewhere cue-bidding in response shows not only a control but also some interest in slam.
Depends. You will never cuebid if you have no interest in slam at all - in that case you just sign off in game.
Here, you have indicated your range quite accurately by not opening and then showing a maximum pass by using Drury. So in this case partner must have slam interest, knowing that you don't have opening values. This means you have to cooperate.
But if you were not a passed hand you might wonder if partner, by his cuebid, was saying:
- that he has slam interest in case you have substantial extras (so he only wants you to cooperate in that case), or
- that he has slam interest even if you are minimum so you must cooperate regardless.
This makes slam bidding difficult in situation where the bidding reaches the 4-level while both partners have a wide range. There are conventions such as Last Train and (non)Serious 3NT that can help but they are prone to misunderstanding and also claim bids that you might want to use for other purposes.
So try to avoid situations in which both partners have a wide range at the 4-level:
- make agreements about what strengths are shown by jumps
- when your main concern is partner's general strength rather than whether he can cue a particular suit and has enough keycards, consider a quantitative slam try instead of cuebidding and RKC.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket