KCB or RKCB
#1
Posted 2017-December-15, 10:19
When I check on line resources I rarely find anyone mentioning KCB. It seems to be always standard Blackwood for beginners but stressing that RKCB is much superior and strongly recommending moving straight to itas soon as possible.
Is there any merit in the Standard -> KCB -> RKCB progression or should we at some point just skip straight to RKCB?
#2
Posted 2017-December-15, 10:51
OK, I checked online before posting and found a reference to KCB being responses of 04-15-2-3. I suppose if you find this easier you might use it; for me it seems pretty pointless and more a way of confusing players than enlightening them.
#4
Posted 2017-December-15, 11:25
#5
Posted 2017-December-15, 11:46
Zelandakh, on 2017-December-15, 10:51, said:
OK, I checked online before posting and found a reference to KCB being responses of 04-15-2-3. I suppose if you find this easier you might use it; for me it seems pretty pointless and more a way of confusing players than enlightening them.
I learned it from Mr Bridge in my first year playing bridge. There are other references that suggest it was popular for a time before being overtaken by RKCB.
http://www.bridgeguy..._blackwood.html
https://www.bridgeha...d_Blackwood.htm
So presumably it had some merit, but from the comments so far, not a lot.
#6
Posted 2017-December-15, 12:08
My sense is that more good players play 1430, but I've played it both ways with various partners.
As newer players, it probably doesn't matter which you choose, just decide on one way to do it and use that one.
As for when it's on, start with some simple, but hard and fast rules about what the "trump suit" is. After you've used it for a while and are confident with the responses, then maybe you can adjust those agreements.
I'd recommend that where no suit agreement has occurred, the last bid suit is "trump", where more than one suit has been agreed upon the last agreed suit be "trump". It may mean that sometime you might not be able to get the information you need, but it keeps things simple and let's you concentrate on using the convention correctly.
#7
Posted 2017-December-15, 12:18
For me, though, Key Card Blackwood (KCB) is a more general concept than RKCB that also covers e.g.
* Exclusion Roman Key card Blackwood (ERKCB) (which is slightly less general than Exclusion Key Card Blackwood (EKCB))
* 6-Ace Roman Key Card Blackwood (6ARKCB)
* Kickback
* Parity Key Card Blackwood (PKCB) (which I use a lot).
#8
Posted 2017-December-15, 12:21
rmnka447, on 2017-December-15, 12:08, said:
No, it is just the same as Standard Blackwood but with the trump king being treated on the same level as an Ace, so that the absence of two of the five 'aces' would suggest abandoning slam ambition. 5C = 0 or 4, 5D = 1 or 5, 5H = 2, 5S = 3. Seemed like a very simple and logical extension of standard Blackwood, and it was very easy for me to move on to RKCB from there. My biggest problem with moving to RKCB was not unlearning KCB but remembering 1430 / 3014 and the steps after the queen ask, and whether the the third step showed the cheapest king or a specific king. I had two partners and they played different versions. At least with KCB there was only one version.
#9
Posted 2017-December-15, 12:27
#10
Posted 2017-December-15, 12:42
johnu, on 2017-December-15, 12:27, said:
This is all very interesting. I can see trouble ahead!! Some more Bernard Magee bashing.
Quite a few players at my local clubs play KCB. Perhaps it's because of the influence of the Mr Bridge magazine in the UK, and its 'expert', Bernard Magee, who advocates KCB. In fact in this article he suggests that RKCB is for more advanced playersand suggests that your average Mr Bridge reader should stick to KCB.
http://www.mrbridge....ing_Part_1.pdf.
Larry Cohen also warns about the dangers of moving to RKCB unless you are an experienced player. He says:
"RKC is a useful tool for experienced players. It is probably the method that causes the most accidents. Be prepared to have some catastrophes if you use this convention."
#11
Posted 2017-December-15, 13:33
It isn't horrible but either 3014 or 1430 is better. You don't usually want to be in slam off a keycard and Q of trump. 1430/3014 shows if have Q with 2 trumps and often can ask for Q with less or with 3 or 4.
#12
Posted 2017-December-15, 13:49
steve2005, on 2017-December-15, 13:33, said:
It isn't horrible but either 3014 or 1430 is better. You don't usually want to be in slam off a keycard and Q of trump. 1430/3014 shows if have Q with 2 trumps and often can ask for Q with less.
I have never heard of it either, but the OP has said that a lot of his local players play it. So I guess it really depends on whether these people will tend to be potential partners, though if they are adaptable and willing to play RKCB then this would be the better choice.
#13
Posted 2017-December-15, 14:06
steve2005, on 2017-December-15, 13:33, said:
It isn't horrible but either 3014 or 1430 is better. You don't usually want to be in slam off a keycard and Q of trump. 1430/3014 shows if have Q with 2 trumps and often can ask for Q with less.
These replies have really surprised me. I have obviously learned a Blackwood variant that I thought was fairly standard but is in fact very localised. Reappraisal time!
A wholly hypothetical question then. If RKCB is too advanced for a beginner's introduction to Ace asking conventions, would Key Card Blackwood not be a better starting point than Standard Blackwood, as it requires very little extra to learn it - just five aces instead of four so highlighting the value of the trump king, and an understanding of how the trump suit is agreed/implied, both of which seem like good preparation for RKCB for not much additional effort. In other words, ignore standard Blackwood altogether.
#14
Posted 2017-December-15, 14:50
Liversidge, on 2017-December-15, 14:06, said:
You could leave out Queen ask for now, is more advanced.
If people use this convention in your area may not be as bad but nobody plays it (or even heard of it) where I am.
I always found straight Blackwood not often helpful even as a beginner. Someone suggested showing how to cuebid. This may be more helpful. People overuse Blackwood and KC anyways.
#15
Posted 2017-December-15, 19:01
Liversidge, on 2017-December-15, 12:21, said:
Play Spiral Scan for side honors.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#16
Posted 2017-December-16, 02:01
#18
Posted 2017-December-16, 05:06
msjennifer, on 2017-December-16, 02:01, said:
That chimes with my thinking. I have been reflecting on the responses and still feel that KCB is an easy and useful step to take. Partner is quick on the uptake and when we have used it a dozen or more times I am sure he will want to find out more about RKCB and we can then discuss it. No doubt a board will appear where knowing the whereabouts of the trump queen will have been a key factor and that will be a good time to talk about it. As one poster has said, we might first try RKCB without the queen ask. Partner is sensible enough to judge whether to just go for it in one or in two stages.
We will need to be careful about the responses to the queen ask. There are at least three variants I know of that appear in bridge books and I found it confusing when I first agreed to play it with a former partner. In the end we both bought a copy of the same book and worked from that.
One minor problem is that although KCB is quite common in our area, it does not feature in any current books on bidding but I do have a handout that covers it, including how and when the trump suit is/is not agreed.
#19
Posted 2017-December-16, 05:12
msjennifer, on 2017-December-16, 02:01, said:
1430 does not even need to be mentioned so no strain there. Where RKCB causes problems is possible ambiguity between 0 and 3 or 1 and 4, and with the queen ask after a 5m response.
My suggestion would be for beginners to ignore kings, SSAs and voids to start with. Add kings only when the sequences for 5 keycards and trump queen are completely understood and well practised; the rest can wait until the player reaches an advanced level.
One side-effect of this is to simplify the queen ask a little - now we respond in the agreed suit (5M except the specific sequence ... - 4NT - 5♦ - 5♠ with ♥ agreed) without the queen and 5NT with it. This makes for an easy transition to kings later, as the unused responses are just adding something extra.
For the ambiguity, one solution is to teach that we never play 5M with 3 or 4 keycards (unless having opened 2♣), so a 5M sign-off is treated as a queen ask for the higher number. That is probably a little too tricky for a real beginner but not too difficult once the player has grasped the basics and is discovering the issues.
#20
Posted 2017-December-16, 14:50
steve2005, on 2017-December-15, 14:50, said:
If people use this convention in your area may not be as bad but nobody plays it (or even heard of it) where I am.
I always found straight Blackwood not often helpful even as a beginner. Someone suggested showing how to cuebid. This may be more helpful. People overuse Blackwood and KC anyways.
There is much truth in this. I prefer control showing bids, and so did Easly Blackwood. There is much truth in the statement "A player's skill at bridge is inversely proportional to the amount he uses blackwood."