Gerber
#21
Posted 2015-December-13, 18:10
On my land nobody knows about gerber, but they missuse blackwood the most, using it for hands that want to invite to slam.
Inviting to slam is way more likely than having slam but having to check for keycards before bidding it. 4 clubs is very useful for a variety of slam invites like splinter, natural, cuebid, etc.
#22
Posted 2015-December-13, 19:57
Fluffy, on 2015-December-13, 18:10, said:
On my land nobody knows about gerber, but they missuse blackwood the most, using it for hands that want to invite to slam.
Inviting to slam is way more likely than having slam but having to check for keycards before bidding it. 4 clubs is very useful for a variety of slam invites like splinter, natural, cuebid, etc.
So Gerber would be an improvement for them. They could misuse Gerber and be a level lower.
#23
Posted 2015-December-14, 04:23
ArtK78, on 2015-December-13, 19:57, said:
Not really. Pairs who play "4NT is always blackwood" rarely have misunderstandings about it. They are sometimes stuck for a bid when they have a quantitative 4NT bid but that should not be a top priority for most club players.
Club-level gerberist have basically two options:
- 4♣ is always Gerber. Needless to say that is terrible.
- 4♣ is sometimes Gerber. Leads to tons of misunderstandings.
#24
Posted 2015-December-14, 07:01
helene_t, on 2015-December-14, 04:23, said:
Club-level gerberist have basically two options:
- 4♣ is always Gerber. Needless to say that is terrible.
- 4♣ is sometimes Gerber. Leads to tons of misunderstandings.
Or option 3 which is not uncommon, only Gerber directly over a natural 1N or 2N opener (with 2♣-2♦-2N and the multi equivalent included) which almost never has misunderstandings until you try to ask for kings.
#25
Posted 2015-December-14, 07:08
helene_t, on 2015-December-14, 04:23, said:
That used to work quite well when Gerber was alertable. If the expected alert did not happen, it was emphasised by a long hard glare. Partner got the message.
Fortunately that method no longer works.
#26
Posted 2015-December-14, 08:04
#27
Posted 2015-December-14, 11:07
#28
Posted 2015-December-14, 14:29
#29
Posted 2015-December-14, 22:06
#30
Posted 2015-December-15, 10:19
timevell, on 2015-December-14, 22:06, said:
I strongly disagree with your first point. It is very possible to use Gerber effectively when a suit is agreed upon in certain circumstances. The partnership must have a very specific set of rules when 4♣ (or, for that matter, some other bid) is Gerber.
The most common agreement to use 4♣ as Gerber when a suit is agreed is 1NT - 2♣ - 2♥/♠ - 4♣. But there may be other situations where 4♣ is Gerber following suit agreement.
#31
Posted 2015-December-16, 05:22
Cyberyeti, on 2015-December-13, 12:22, said:
So transfer to diamonds, 4♥ ace ask, and still stop in 5♦. No need for Gerber, but there is a need for an ace ask other than 4NT.
Even if you are not playing kickback as a matter of course, surely using this 4♥ as an ace ask is more useful than a splinter - or what do you use it for?
#32
Posted 2015-December-16, 05:27
fromageGB, on 2015-December-16, 05:22, said:
Even if you are not playing kickback as a matter of course, surely using this 4♥ as an ace ask is more useful than a splinter - or what do you use it for?
This was in response to something saying super gerber 5♣ was the answer. Of course 4♥ will do as well and is what I could use (after a 3♦ slammish response rather than a transfer), but in practice I'd prob just gerber.