mikeh, on 2012-September-26, 10:13, said:
I think 3N by N was bizarre. S went out of his way to suggest playing in diamonds, a suit in which N might very well have held Hx, and N was short hearts and AKxx in diamonds, with AQ AK in the side suits!!!!!
makes me wonder if I have the N hand wrong and that he was 4234 or 3235, but I don't think so.
mikeh, on 2012-September-26, 10:13, said:
I'd really like to ask N what kind of hand he'd need in order to support diamonds on this auction.
The N hand was always very good, and has suddenly improved, yet N bids as if he held KQxx Jx Axx AKJx.
I don't like the methods, but that is neither here nor there (I prefer transfers over 2N).
That is what I play with my regular partner.
mikeh, on 2012-September-26, 10:13, said:
North absolutely has to announce diamonds. Indeed, I would bid 3♠ and, if S bid 3N...which he wouldn't here, of course, I'd then bid 4♣ to drive home just how great my hand has become in support of diamonds.
My first reaction was that 3
♠ should be natural and 4c
♠, but South didn't bid 3
♣ to ask for the majors, so yes...good suggestion!
mikeh, on 2012-September-26, 10:13, said:
As for whether I'd allow 6♦ to stand, in real life I'd want to hear the arguments advanced by both sides. But I do have an opinion based on the information in the thread.
My take is that S clearly showed slam interest by his sequence. He shows 6+ hearts with his 4♥ call but had earlier suggested a minor suit contract even tho he knew of at least a 6-2 heart fit. No way does anyone look for 5♦ here....S was looking for 6♦.
But that raises another issue. Should a committee accept an argument by N-S that 5♦ showed some slam interest on the part of N? After all, that argument would go, N has opted for what might be a 4=4 and almost certainly isn't more than a 5=4 minor suit game rather than the 10 trick 6-2 heart game. He can't/shouldn't do that unless he has extras....so as to permit S to make a judgment call.
But, the counter-argument, that seems persuasive to me... is that S has made a slam try, and N has had two chances to show his actual values....once over 3♦ and then over 4♥ by jumping to slam....I honestly can't understand why he wouldn't.
So N CANNOT hold his actual hand....unless he conveys doubt by his BIT.
It is not that the BIT necessarily shows extra slam interest than would be shown by the 5♦ call. It is more that a smooth 5♦ would positively deny such an incredible hand while the BIT leaves that holding more possible. Thus bidding slam would be silly (imo) absent the BIT but demonstrably enjoys an enhanced likelihood of success after the BIT.
So I think I'd roll it back, and would feel that justice was done...any N player who misbids as badly as this one did should NOT be permitted to reach the right spot after a BIT unless I can be persuaded that the result could not in any rational way be linked to the BIT. And NS have a fail on that, imo.
I cast NO aspersions on the ethics of either player.
I've put some parts in bold, but follow the rest of your reasoning as well.
Luckily E-W didn't call TD, could get a difficult decision