Posted 2012-April-27, 06:43
Sometimes experiencing something right in front of you should reveal secrets. There is a hand type where slam is a good bet, but where Responder would not make a try on his own. It is not the hand where you need 21 and not 20. It could be the trick source, but the more common is the unbalanced responder with a 5-piece being practical. Here, Responder has a 7-loser hand with a stiff. 20-21 HCP can easily fill the spaces of needed cover cards for slam. So, IMO, a super cue here says that Opener has a hand that may produce six covers opposite this unbalanced hand potential. As the unbalance usually features a stiff in the other major, that makes it even easier, btw. When spades are agreed, you have even more space to unwind this. But, my meaning for 4C is a hand suitable for slam opposite,the 5431 max, showing cards,in clubs (not right if this is your stiff, pard). A sort of anti-Bluhmer, if you will, of an anti-empathetic-splinter.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.
Do you figure that if partner had good four card fit he would have super accepted over 3♦? Dp you suspect, that undiscussed, 4♣ would not be gerber, but rather cue-bid slam try? IF so, partner would have a club control, three card support and probably 21 hcp or 20 hcp with some other redeeming feature (five card suit, lots of tens, something like that).
So the question is would you cooperate with a 4♦ bid, take control with blackwood, or signoff with a 4♥ bid, or get creative with some other call? And undiscussed with a partner that (to give reference) is better player than me, would you think he would take 4♦ as last train? Cue-bid? (heaven forbid, answer to gerber?).