Tuesday,
March 22, 2005 5:22 AM
KCB - MINORS
PITBULLS:
KCB with the
minors can cause confusion even among the most established partnerships. Kantar
offers some guidelines. He advises to break down the understandings depending
on whether the minor fit
is found at the 3 level or the 4 level. If the fit is found at the 3
level , a 4 level raise in the minor is KCB as longs as there are two
obvious conditions satisfied. 1)
The partnership must be in a game forcing auction.
This is obvious or else the raise to 4 of the minor just might be invitational or a waiting bid .
2) The other condition is that one partner has KCB rights that the other does
not have. Only the unlimited hand
can bid KCB . The limited hand
can raise to the 4 level but is it not
KCB . Here are some examples.
from Kantar to try.
When
the minor fit
is just discovered at the 4 level , Kantar calls that the agreement and not
the ask. No matter if it is a forcing auction or the hand it unlimited , 4 of a minor is
the agreement and not the ask. At the rarified
4 level , Kantar advises you use Kickback to ask for
Aces rather than interpreted as a Q bid. He defines Kickback when clubs is the agreed suit as always
being diamonds except when diamonds have been previously bid . Hearts
is KCB in that case. When diamonds are the agreed suit , hearts
is the KCB ask unless it was a first bid suit by opener or responder. In
that case 4♠
is KCB. Here are some examples
from Kantar to try.
The
above understandings assume the partnership
has agreed upon a minor fit at the 4 level. What if just one partner keeps
rebidding his minor single handedly . Is there any way he can use KCB at the 4
level ? Kantar says yes & no . He says it depends on the number of unbid
suits remaining
during the auction. 1) If
there are two unbid suits, there is NO keycard ask; bidding either
unbid suit is a cuebid and 4NT is to play. Furthermore, a suit bid by either opponent can never be used as the RKB ask suit If there is one or none
unbid suits , the 4th suit can be used as KCB. Here are some examples
from Kantar to try.
Pulling 3NT to a minor is never done from a position
of weakness. If the minor has already been agreed upon
by the partnership , pulling 3NT to that minor
is KCB. If it is a singlehanded pull of 3NT to a
minor , then it is a slam try but
not KCB . 1♥-P-1♠-P 2♣-P-3NT-P 4♣ is a slam try but not KCB.
Minor
suit agreements at the 2 level
are trivial. A jump to the 4
level is KCB . If NT has been bid at the 1 or 2 level , a jump to 4 of the
agreed minor is KCB. Even single handed bid minors , if it is a jump after a NT
bid , is KCB.
Kantar
does not define any way to ask for kings
with minor suit KCB. The queen ask is the next suit and partner is to respond
the lower ranking King if she holds the trump queen. For those purists who want
a way of asking for Kings after a minor suit KCB sequence, Maurice & Susan
recommend using the suit above the trump suit as asking for Kings. Specific
suit asking bids are not defined for minor suits either. Both these concepts
were invented by Kantar for major
suits only.
Partnership
understandings after systemic bids can signal KCB in the minor . Tom & I
have two of them . One of a major – 3NT and a pull to a minor is KCB . This
understanding is based on the 3NT bid showing 4-4 in the minors. The other is
after our 3♣ Re-Stayman bid after a 1NT or 2NT openers. If we agree to
the suit indicated , it is automatically KCB . Here are some examples
to try.