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Bridge for Beginners. Lesson 13 Bidding to Slams. Homework – Question 1. AKQ9 KJ7 AQ2 AK5. AKQT72 652 AK AK. KQ7 AK53 KT4 AJ3. QT8 AK KQ753 AJ3. What is your opening bid?. 2 . 2 . 2NT. 1 . AKJT6 AQT7 9 KQJ.
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Bridge for Beginners Lesson 13 Bidding to Slams
Homework – Question 1 AKQ9 KJ7 AQ2 AK5 AKQT72 652 AK AK KQ7 AK53 KT4 AJ3 QT8 AK KQ753 AJ3 • What is your opening bid? 2 2 2NT 1 AKJT6 AQT7 9 KQJ A9 AKJT AQ62 KQJ KJ7 AK53 KT4 AJ3 A KQJ7 AKQ952 62 2 2 1 2
Homework Question 2a • What is your response When partner has opened 2 2 2 2 2NT 2 2NT 2NT 2NT PASS 6 5 3 2 4 3 9 6 5 2 T J 7
Homework Question 2b • What is your response When partner has opened 2 2 2 2 2NT 2 2NT 2NT 2NT 3NT 8 5 4 7 2 T 8 3 Q 5 A 4 7
Homework Question 2c • What is your response When partner has opened 2 2 2 2 2NT 2 2 2 3 3NT Q T 5 4 3 J T 7 Q 9 K 7 Q
Homework Question 2d • What is your response When partner has opened 2 2 2 2 2NT 2 2 3 3 3NT A K 6 8 5 Q 9 2 6 5 T 3 7
Homework Question 2e • What is your response When partner has opened 2 2 2 2 2NT 2 2NT 2NT 2NT 3NT 8 7 3 7 6 5 4 K 4 Q 3 2 5
Homework Question 2f • What is your response When partner has opened 2 2 2 2 2NT 2 2NT 2NT 2NT 3 K Q 8 7 3 3 Q T 5 4 3 6 2
Bidding to Slams • We looked at opening bids with strong hands last week • And responses • Some hands had slam possibility • But any slam bid would have been made in hope rather than expectation • To help we will learn a Conventional Bid • Called ‘Blackwood’
Blackwood Convention • If you bid 1NT and partner responds 4NT • This is a ‘minimaxi’ slam try • You Pass with a minimum opener • Or bid 6NT with a maximum • But 4NT is not otherwise used • Because 3NT is game • If you agree a suit and then bid 4NT • Shows slam interest and is Blackwood
Blackwood Convention • After a bidding sequence you bid 4 and partner bids 4NT • Partner thinks you may have slam on • And is checking that you are not missing more than 1 Ace • There are 2 versions • Standard Blackwood • Roman Key Card Blackwood (RKCB)
Blackwood Convention • When partner bids 4NT • Although a Conventional Bid do NOT alert • No alerts over 3NT • The 4NT bid says: • How many top cards have you?
Standard Blackwood • Top cards are the 4 Aces • With 0 or 4 Aces bid 5 • With 1 Ace bid 5 • With 2 Aces bid 5 • With 3 Aces bid 5 • These bids say nothing about the suit bid • They reply to partner’s request
Standard Blackwood • Partner knows how many Aces you hold • And whether to bid a slam (12 tricks) • Or look for a Grand Slam (13 tricks) • Partner can ask for Kings • If a Grand is likely • But only do this with all Aces present • Because you are committed to at least a small slam
Standard Blackwood • Partner asks for Kings by bidding 5NT • Responses are: • With 0 Kings bid 6 • With 1 King bid 6 • With 2 Kings bid 6 • With 3 Kings bid 6 • With 4 Kings bid 6NT
Roman Key Card Blackwood • King of trumps is counted as a top card • So 5 Key Cards • 4NT asks how many of these do you have • Partner then responds: • With 3 or 0 Key Cards bid 5 • With 4 or 1 Key Cards bid 5 • With 5 or 2 Key Cards, no Q trumps bid 5 • With 5 or 2 Key Cards, + Q trumps bid 5 • Remember the sequence 30, 41, 52
RKCB • Partner asks for Kings by bidding 5NT • But not including the trump King • Responses are: • With 0 Kings bid 6 • With 1 King bid 6 • With 2 Kings bid 6 • With 3 Kings bid 6
Blackwood – Example 1 Partner opens 1 Your bid? 2 Partner bids 4NT What is your response Ordinary Blackwood? With 1 Ace 5 RKCB? With 1 Key Card 5 A 5 4 5 4 9 8 T 7 4 Q 4 5
Blackwood – Example 2 Partner opens 1 Your bid? 2 Partner bids 4NT What is your response Ordinary Blackwood? With 1 Ace 5 RKCB? With 2 Key Cards and not Q trumps 5 A 5 4 5 4 K 8 T 7 4 J 4 5
Blackwood – Example 3 Partner opens 2 Your bid? 2 positive 8+ HCP Partner bids 4NT Agreeing your suit Ordinary Blackwood? With 1 Ace 5 RKCB? With 2 Key Cards plus Q trumps 5 A 5 4 8 5 K Q Now partner bids 5NT Asking about Kings Ordinary Blackwood? With 1 King 6 RKCB? With No Kings to count 6 T 7 4 3 4 5
Blackwood – Example 4 The Bidding Goes Partner opens 2 2 4NT Ordinary Blackwood? With no Aces 5 RKCB? With 1 Key Card 5 5 4 2 3 ? Q 5 4 K 8 T 7 4 J 4 5
Blackwood – Example 5 The Bidding Goes Partner opens 1 3 4NT Ordinary Blackwood? With no Aces 5 RKCB? With no Key Cards 5 Q 5 4 1NT 4 ? Q 5 4 8 Q 7 4 Q 4 5
Blackwood – Example 6 The Bidding Goes Partner opens 2 4NT Ordinary Blackwood? With 2 Aces 5 RKCB? With 2 Key Cards plus Q trumps 5 A 5 4 3 ? Q 5 4 8 A 7 4 4 3 5
When do You Bid the Slam? • If you have all Aces or all Key cards present bid the slam • And think about asking for Kings • Missing 1 Ace or 1 Key card • Bid it with good suit(s) to run • Using RKCB bid it if you hold the trump Q • Missing 2 Aces or Key cards • Stop at the 5 level
Blackwood or RKCB • Blackwood is slightly easier • Blackwood is universal • RKCB gives you more information • Making judgement on bidding the slam more accurate • If you play RKCB all the time it becomes the norm • RKCB can give you an edge
Summary • You MUST use one or other version • I strongly advise RKCB • Don’t panic when partner bids 4NT • All you have to do is make the correct response • Partner has the difficult job to decide where to stop • Bidding and making slams gives tremendous satisfaction!!!