asking for aces
#1
Posted 2020-June-09, 11:57
#2
Posted 2020-June-09, 12:07
He can also show a strong hand first by cue bidding 2♦.
#3
Posted 2020-June-09, 13:43
arepo24, on 2020-June-09, 11:57, said:
As barmar said he could cuebid 2♦, or he could bid 2NT with a stop in ♦: both show his range of strength.
arepo24, on 2020-June-09, 11:57, said:
That is not clear thinking.
He has little idea of your distribution and it is not particularly likely that a slam is on the cards even if you have the maximum for 1NT and all aces are present.
Bidding is a collaborative process, even more so when one has pressing need for more information.
#4
Posted 2020-June-09, 14:07
All we need to know is: When one is ready to ask for aces, can they bid Gerber when both a club and a NT have already been bid, or can one ask for aces with 4 NT?
One person said they still must use Gerber, because 4 NT would be considered quantitative. Is this correct?
#5
Posted 2020-June-09, 14:16
That being said, if you absolutely insist then it's a matter of which poison you'd rather pick. You can either say that Blackwood requires a trump suit, and therefore 4NT is quantitative, and by extension demand that 4♣ is Gerber. Or you could say that any weird jump to 4NT is RKC for the last bid suit, in this case clubs. I don't see much of a difference in quality between the two agreements, both sound poor.
#6
Posted 2020-June-09, 14:22
arepo24, on 2020-June-09, 14:07, said:
All we need to know is: When one is ready to ask for aces, can they bid Gerber when both a club and a NT have already been bid, or can one ask for aces with 4 NT?
One person said they still must use Gerber, because 4 NT would be considered quantitative. Is this correct?
I'm lukewarm about Gerber, unlike many who are downright hostile

But it can often get in the way and in general is not very useful.
My suggestion is to use it only directly over 1NT or 2NT openings or at most after 1NT 2♣ 2♦.
Yes IMO 4NT should be quantitative after 1♣ 1NT.
So you don't have any way of asking for Aces until another suit has been shown, and neither can ask for keycards until a fit has been found.
#7
Posted 2020-June-09, 14:30
#8
Posted 2020-June-09, 15:23
I appreciate you honing in on my actual question. I should not have given a "for instance" question in the first place.
All I really needed to know was the RULE for when to do Gerber vs NT under the circumstances I outlined. (forget about the bidding sequence and stuff--it's not pertinent to the rule answer I need)
And I think you answered it pretty well. Obviously the rules must state that one must bid Gerber if one wants an Ace answer, because a NT bid will be quantitative under the circumstances.
Thanks again.
#9
Posted 2020-June-09, 15:30
barmar, on 2020-June-09, 12:07, said:
He can also show a strong hand first by cue bidding 2♦.
A 3♣ rebid isn't forcing so you wouldn't want to play a potential slam hand in a partscore. I would assume 4♣ was Gerber if there was no prior agreement, and that rebidding 2♦ would be the way to go with a powerhouse hand that didn't want to ask for aces right away.
#13
Posted 2020-June-10, 01:00
arepo24, on 2020-June-09, 14:07, said:
All we need to know is: When one is ready to ask for aces, can they bid Gerber when both a club and a NT have already been bid, or can one ask for aces with 4 NT?
One person said they still must use Gerber, because 4 NT would be considered quantitative. Is this correct?
A common method is, to show the Aces count if pos. ver. a quantitative 4NT.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#14
Posted 2020-June-10, 03:21
RKC the final word. Without agreement it seems that 4♣ should be RKC for CLUBS. 4 NT would be quantitative. The only thing that makes sense to me is that he has a solid suit with only 3 outside losers. Otherwise with potential cue bid first.
After 1♣ -pass- 1NT make a forcing bid first looking for some fit or strength first. 4♣would suggest that something makes his moose of a hand not suitable for a forcing 2♣.
#15
Posted 2020-June-10, 07:36
#16
Posted 2020-June-10, 09:09
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#18
Posted 2020-June-10, 14:00
In general, 4C is standard Gerber when made (i) where no trump suit has been agreed (ii) over a 1NT or 2NT bid:
1x 1y
1NT 4C
1x 1y
2NT 4C
1x 1y
1z 2(fourth suit)
2NT 4C
1x 2y
2NT 4C
If you play "Standard expert," then 4C is RKC Gerber after a Stayman inquiry and a major suit response:
1NT 2C
2H/S 4C
It's sort of "standard" to play 3 of the other major as an unbalanced slam try; 4D as a balanced slam try; and 4C as RKC Gerber. That way, 4NT is natural, with no fit.
In other situations, 4C is generally NOT Gerber.
Cheers,
Mike
#19
Posted 2020-June-10, 14:35
arepo24, on 2020-June-09, 11:57, said:
Assume that you hold a strong hand and your partner is a human rather than a robot. Then IMO, over 1♣ (1♦) 1N (P) ??
- 2N = BAL 18-19 HCP.
- 3N = NAT based on good ♣s e.g. ♠ A ♥ Q x x ♦ x ♣ A K Q J x x x
- 4♣ = ART Gerber -- or better Keycard Gerber, setting ♣ as trumps (see previous posts).
- 2♦ = CUE General purpose force e.g. 3-suiter short in ♦.
- 3♣ = INV Good suit N/F. e.g. ♠ x x ♥ x x ♦ A K ♣ K Q J x x x x
- 2♥/2♠ = NAT F1 e.g. ♠ x x ♥ A K x x x ♦ - ♣ A Q J x x x
- 3♦/3♥/3♠ = SPL good ♣ e.g. ♠ Q x x ♥ - ♦ A x ♣ A K Q x x x x x
- 4♦/4♥/4♠ = ??? (void SPL? 7-6 2-suiter? I should have opened 2♣?)
- 4N = ??? Don't know but open to suggestions (perhaps asking for ♦ control?).