phoenixmj, on 2020-July-18, 15:43, said:
I opened the bidding 1H and partner responded 2NT. My 3c rebid shows shortness in clubs. Partner's 3 spade rebid shows 1st round control in spades. My 3NT bid shows slam interest and asks for controls. My partner knows that I have either a singleton or void in clubs - so does partner show 1st or 2nd round control in diamonds or does he show clubs?
Thanks in advance for any and all help. Also, if you have comments on the start of the bidding, please share.
I think you will find that your slam bidding improves if you cuebid to show first or second round controls.
On this hand that leads to this very nice auction:
1!H 2NT
3!C 3!D / shortage in clubs, excites N / diamond control is music to South's ears
3!S 4!C / Spade control / club control; opposite a singleton, must be showing the Ace
4NT / S thinks: I have AKQ of trump, partner is still interested in slam. He has the ace of clubs and what else to get to an opening hand?
If you want an interesting fillip, North could bid 4!D at his second turn (jumps in game-forcing auctions are never natural, and once we've found a major suit fit, we don't go looking for a minor-suit fit). This would be of great interest to S, knowing that partner has an opening hand in support of hearts with no wasted values in diamonds or clubs!
Also of note:
A splinter (1!H - 3!S, for instance) should show a
minimum opening hand in support of partner's major -- that is, a max of 16 support points. If you are stronger than that, you lose far too much bidding space, and a better plan is to create a game force then start cuebidding.
If you play mini-splinters, you can add a bit of fun to them, as well by playing mini-splinters. A mini-splinter is defined as
4-card support with an
invitational hand and a
singleton, shown by a simple jump-shift over partner's one-of-a-major opening (1S - 3C or 1H - 2S, for instance). Then you still have the normal splinter for hands up to 16 support points. THE TWIST: you can mini-splinter on a hand too strong to make a normal splinter, and then take further action if partner signs off at 3M. THE CAVEAT: You need some way of accepting the game try other than jumping to game, in case responder has the maxi splinter. So I would want an agreement that in the auction
1!H - 3!C, opener's rebids have the following meanings:
3!D: How good is your mini-splinter? With aces and kings, bid 4; otherwise bid 3!H (Any bid inbetween the mini-splinter and game is a help-suit game try; the fewer suits available, the more general it is)
3!H: to play
3!S: Cuebid with at least some slam interest
3NT: Reeeeely Beeeeg hand -- expecting a cuebid if responder has any control other than shown so far (a void in clubs would be shown with 4!C, if not that 4!D with the !DA or K, 4!S with the !S A or K, 4!H with neither f those holdings)
4!C/!D: Cuebid *in case* responder has the maxi splinter. If not, responder just bids 4!H
4!H: To play, but not a slam-interested hand unless responder has a really good maxi-splinter
If you only play mini-splinters (and not the mini-maxi), then opener's rebids are a bit simpler; 3 or 4 of the trump suit are to play; suits below 3M are help suit game tries (or rarely slam tries), and bids above 3M are cuebids asking how good responder's mini-splinter is.
phoenixmj "I opened the bidding 1H and partner responded 2NT. My 3c rebid shows shortness in clubs. Partner's 3 spade rebid shows 1st round control in spades. My 3NT bid shows slam interest and asks for controls. My partner knows that I have either a singleton or void in clubs - so does partner show 1st or 2nd round control in diamonds or does he show clubs? Thanks in advance for any and all help. Also, if you have comments on the start of the bidding, please share."
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Rotated deal to make West dealer. IMO:
- A 3♦ splinter would be a slightly better description of responder's hand.
- Opener's 3NT S/T showed appreciation of the hand's distributional values.
- Responder should now cue-bid his ♣A. Bypassing a control usually denies it.