DavidKok, on 2023-November-21, 17:28, said:
Edit: I forgot to add, I would stay away from kickback, redwood, minorwood and other stuff like that. In my experience it hurts more than it helps, especially if you don't know on which auctions you would like to play it. I think the primary use of those conventions is to tickle the people with a gadget addiction. More generally, optimising your key card structures like this is very low priority and has a significant opportunity cost in lost natural calls and confused auctions.
Your comments make sense if aimed at the average non-expert player. However, the great majority of expert partnerships not only use gadgets such as kickback but actually know how to do so.
Minorwood is, imo, not something any serious player should use, especially if (and I’ve seen a partnership of two grand life masters do this) 4m is minorwood even when it’s the first time the minor has been raised! Admittedly the risks are low, in that disaster doesn’t happen often, but there’s simply no reason why one should ever treat suit agreement as keycard.
Let’s look at a classic, if awkward, 2/1 auction. 1S 2H 3D.
Responder has a gf hand with, say, 1=5=4=3, so he’s got interest in diamonds and perhaps slam interest. But using 4D to both show support and demand a keycard response is idiotic.
What if opener has AKQxx x AQxxx xx and responder x AKQxx KJxxx Qx
Did either do anything wrong getting to 4D? Now opener shows 2 with the queen….5C. Fine…..except that responder has no idea whether slam is good. Obviously it isn’t on my example…but…
Oh…I got opener’s hand wrong….it’s AJxxx Jx AQJxx x. So sorry we missed the slam. Or maybe it was Kx in clubs? Again, sorry we missed the slam
The answer is to use 4D as setting trump and requiring each partner to cue bid controls….there’s almost always room to do so below 5m, especially if you use either player’s 4N as a kind of last train substitute….4N says ‘I have nothing to cue bid below game, at this stage, but my hand is otherwise better than I’ve shown’.
This sort of approach requires considerable partnership discussion and practice, but I’ve been playing kickback and thus ‘rolling 4N’ in minor auctions for many years and I think we bid our slams about as well as 99.5% of partnerships.
Having to use 4N as keycard, of any variety, in minor auctions is horrible.
On the actual auction, I doubt that many modern acolytes would play a 3D raise as non forcing, but (if they do) nobody would be passing 4D. If forced to play non 2/1 gf, however, I’d splinter.
Btw, playing 2/1 gf, I wouldn’t splinter because the hand is too strong. I like splinters to show good working minimums rather than extras. With extras, we take it slow…set trump (although after 1M 2m 3m we can still play 3N) and then control bid.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari