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Gerber

#1 User is offline   euclidz 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 07:32

I've just read through a post on what was described by someone as RKCG. Taking aside RKC anything, during my time on BBO, I've formed the view that most here do not and would not use Gerber. I don't understand why and would appreciate any constructive reasoning on why it is not used?
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#2 User is offline   wank 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 07:38

though gerber is occasionally useful, those occassions are very few and far between. good players often replace gerber with something which has more frequent utility. bad players on the other hand, normally play gerber and use it in entirely inappropriate situations. this has led to a little anti-gerber snobbishness.
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#3 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 08:28

There are 2 cases for Gerber. The first is after a NT opening. Back in the day Gerber was sometimes extremely useful with strong 1-suited hands here but bidding developments have allowed these hands to bid more slowly and effectively, thus robbing Gerber of its niche here to some extent.

The other case is where a suit is agreed and a pair is using Gerber to ask for key cards 4 steps lower. The problem here is that it interferes with the application of cue bids, which means that the conditions for key card asking, specifically knowing that there are not 2 losers in a specific side suit, are often not held.

Finally, sometimes it gets suggested to take this idea a stage further by playing "4 is always Gerber". This has many more issues as 4 is often an extremely useful natural bid.

In short, bidding theory has moved on to the point where Gerber is simply not the most effective approach most of the time. There are still hands where it can be helpful but almost no auctions where it is the best use for a 4 call.
(-: Zel :-)
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#4 User is offline   fromageGB 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 08:35

If I am in a situation with major suit agreed, I want to have 4 as a control showing bid. This is very useful if you use the concept of making cue bids below the level of 4M to determine if any suit is "wide open", such as one hand holding Jx and the other Qxx. If this is the case then it is a waste of time ace asking and perhaps committing to the 5-level where you may go off on bad breaks.

Using cue bids also enables you to show additional strength, without getting above game - you can often leave that decision to partner. Without this, it can sometimes be difficult to discover the strong-strong scenario, the "16 hcp opposite 16", where neither hand is good enough to ace ask unilaterally.

If I jump to 4, and this is an unbid suit, I like this to show a singleton or void in a game going hand, as this can give partner the information he needs (such as his hand has no wasted values in that suit) that can enable him to find a slam that would not be bid on general strength values.

Both of the above apply to any suit of course, not just clubs, but the gains outweigh any Gerber use.

When I have transferred to clubs over partner's 1NT, I like 4 to be a slam suggestion. He has the option of showing support/suitability by replying with his ace reply as if I had asked, but he can also make a denial. Similarly, if 2-suited I can look for a major fit and if one is not there, make a slam try with 4.

Another argument for me is that Gerber does not give enough information. Whatever my hand, I can usually pick a suit where by ace asking in that suit I can discover useful information such as the K or the Q. Usually you can convert the final contract to NT if that seems sensible.

Any Gerber method needs to have specific king responses, and most people don't play that way. Specific kings are sometimes the key to grand slam, as opposed to the small slam most others will bid.

Finally, ace asking with 4, when you are going to play in a suit contract, gains almost nothing. You have all the room you need if you play that the ace ask bid is one step up from 4 of the trump suit. If you are thinking that an advantage is that you can ace ask and still stop in 4, I would counter that your bidding to that point is insufficiently accurate. You should not be asking unless you are - generally speaking - happy at the 5-level.
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#5 User is offline   nullve 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 08:39

Think of it this way: if you have a fit, you can use RKC to find out about key cards, which is better than just finding out about aces, anyway. If you don't have a fit, you need high card points (in the old days 33 or more), but then you will hardly ever reach slam with two aces missing unless someone's made a mistake.
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#6 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 08:49

 nullve, on 2015-December-12, 08:39, said:

Think of it this way: if you have a fit, you can use RKC to find out about key cards, which is better than just finding out about aces, anyway. If you don't have a fit, you need high card points (in the old days 33 or more), but then you will hardly ever reach slam with two aces missing unless someone's made a mistake.


It's useful when one of the hands is balanced, and aces are all you need to know about. Most of the time, keycard will solve this for you but:

1N-2-2-4N and 1N-4N are not ace asking they're quantitative. If you don't play 1N-4m as a Texas transfer then using 1N-4 and 1N-2-2-4 as blackwood has some merit.

Also in the semi balanced cases say 2263 opposite a notrump shape you can easily have a slam on with less than 33 points so asking aces can be useful.
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#7 User is offline   nullve 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 08:59

 Cyberyeti, on 2015-December-12, 08:49, said:

1N-2-2-4N and 1N-4N are not ace asking they're quantitative. If you don't play 1N-4m as a Texas transfer then using 1N-4 and 1N-2-2-4 as blackwood has some merit.

The main reason some don't play South-African Texas is that they play Gerber instead.

Quote

Also in the semi balanced cases say 2263 opposite a notrump shape you can easily have a slam on with less than 33 points so asking aces can be useful.

But with 2263 opposite a notrump shape you're guaranteed at least an 8-card diamond fit, so RKC should be an option.
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#8 User is offline   euclidz 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 09:39

Thanks for the helpful replies
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#9 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 09:41

 nullve, on 2015-December-12, 08:59, said:

The main reason some don't play South-African Texas is that they play Gerber instead.

I do not play either, nor for that matter use 1NT - 2; 2 - 4 as asking for key cards. There are other alternatives here, particularly having a sequence that sets the major as trumps and starts a cue bidding auction complete with S/F3NT. This not only solves the asking and general invite cases but also provides additional security and information on other hands.
(-: Zel :-)
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#10 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 12:42

 nullve, on 2015-December-12, 08:59, said:

The main reason some don't play South-African Texas is that they play Gerber instead.


We actually don't play SAT to use 4 to deal with some of the 5-5M hands so Gerber is just a use for 4.

Quote

But with 2263 opposite a notrump shape you're guaranteed at least an 8-card diamond fit, so RKC should be an option.


Yes, but transfer then 4N is quantitative, so unless you're going to fiddle around or have other arrangements like minorwood it's not always that easy.
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#11 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 12:45

 Zelandakh, on 2015-December-12, 09:41, said:

I do not play either, nor for that matter use 1NT - 2; 2 - 4 as asking for key cards. There are other alternatives here, particularly having a sequence that sets the major as trumps and starts a cue bidding auction complete with S/F3NT. This not only solves the asking and general invite cases but also provides additional security and information on other hands.


This is not too difficult after a 1N opener, it's more awkward after a 2N opener.
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#12 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 14:21

No one wants to admit to ever playing Gerber be ause it is fun to make fun of Gerber. The fact that it makes one think of babies doesn't help, either. Imagine a Bieber Convention. Who would admit to playing that?
"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.
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#13 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 15:48

 Cyberyeti, on 2015-December-12, 12:45, said:

This is not too difficult after a 1N opener, it's more awkward after a 2N opener.

Very true but after a 2NT opening the space is so limited that it makes even less sense to devote a very useful call to such a limited use.
(-: Zel :-)
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#14 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2015-December-12, 17:42

 Zelandakh, on 2015-December-12, 15:48, said:

Very true but after a 2NT opening the space is so limited that it makes even less sense to devote a very useful call to such a limited use.

Over 2N and all you think you need to know is aces could use Super-Gerber 5C
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#15 User is offline   zillahandp 

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Posted 2015-December-13, 09:25

Because all those who say they play it do not seem to understand when 4c is or is not gerber.it is generally taught to beginners who like it because it is lower than 4nt. The only circumstance it might be played is directly over 1/2nt and then very very few hands merit this approach if any. It is the province of the beginner thats why no one at a decent level plays it.
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#16 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2015-December-13, 09:52

Gerber is a very useful convention in the right situation. The problem with Gerber is the problem with every convention - if it is used improperly, it can produce bad results.

I use Gerber in a number of situations. One of them came up in a Grand Nationals Team District semifinals some years ago, and partner forgot, so he used RKCB. This resulted in our playing 5S down 1 instead of 4S making, and it cost the match.

Now, perhaps the anti-Gerber crowd would say that my partner shouldn't have used either key card convention, or that their pet methods would have worked better. And maybe they are right. But that is not the point. Any convention, if used correctly, can work well. And any convention, if used incorrectly, can produce bad results.
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#17 User is offline   nullve 

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Posted 2015-December-13, 10:31

 zillahandp, on 2015-December-13, 09:25, said:

thats why no one at a decent level plays it.

Apparently, Levin-Weinstein play it:

http://info.ecatsbri...n-weinstein.pdf

Maybe it's a cultural thing, like playing Flannery (which they also play, btw).
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#18 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-December-13, 10:32

 zillahandp, on 2015-December-13, 09:25, said:

The only circumstance it might be played is directly over 1/2nt and then very very few hands merit this approach if any. It is the province of the beginner thats why no one at a decent level plays it.

The most common position for playing it is directly over a non-club preempt - this is used by some very good players indeed. The other situations popular at a high level are after a red suit transfer (Baze) and after club suit agreement at the 3 level (Minorwood). To suggest that no good players ever use 4 as a key card ask is quite wrong though.
(-: Zel :-)
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#19 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2015-December-13, 12:22

 steve2005, on 2015-December-12, 17:42, said:

Over 2N and all you think you need to know is aces could use Super-Gerber 5C


OK, so I have x, KQx, KQJxxxxx, x - partner has AKQJ, xx(x), xx(x), AKQJ and we have nowhere to go when partner bids above 5 even 4N is not safe, after gerber I can play 5.
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#20 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2015-December-13, 13:16

 nullve, on 2015-December-12, 08:59, said:

The main reason some don't play South-African Texas is that they play Gerber instead.


If you want Gerber you can just play ordinary Texas.
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