Higher skill levels = stronger player, so option 1 ("a strong positive") means that stronger players are much more likely to consider a given 4NT call to be ace-asking.
For purposes of this poll, please consider only players who have learned at least one convention where 4NT is somehow ace-asking (i.e. ignore absolute beginners), and assume a context where some form of Blackwood/RKCB is played in some sequences (i.e. you are not asking Fantoni/Nunes about their system).
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Fill in the Blank
#1
Posted 2010-November-17, 00:41
"One of the painful things about our time is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and understanding are filled with doubt and indecision"
-- Bertrand Russell
-- Bertrand Russell
#2
Posted 2010-November-17, 03:25
In some cases weaker players will say 4NT is ace asking while advanced players will use it for something else. But the difference is marginal if you ignore absolute beginners.
"It may be rude to leave to go to the bathroom, but it's downright stupid to sit there and piss yourself" - blackshoe
#3
Posted 2010-November-19, 01:32
There was a time the answer was pretty strongly negative. But at present, the RKC disease is so heavily upon the advanced players of the world, in some ways the habit of using it on the way to almost every slam is stronger now than it ever was in the past. I voted "no significant" - used about twice as much as it should be at all levels of the game.
Admittedly I have something of a bee in my bonnet about people who refuse to continue to cuebid at the 5-level after being so happy to use it at the 4-level.
Admittedly I have something of a bee in my bonnet about people who refuse to continue to cuebid at the 5-level after being so happy to use it at the 4-level.
#4
Posted 2010-November-19, 04:16
With spades as the agreed suit, not a lot of difference, with any other suit agreed, experts may be using kickback/minorwood or something other than 4N as the ace ask, so a more significant difference.
#5
Posted 2010-November-19, 08:58
Among forum posters there is a positive corrolation. There is a large group of posters that think the best way to look like an expert is to say that RKC is overused, and that the best way to become a better slam bidder is not to use blackwood for a year. They overly complicate simple hands by cuebidding a few more times than necessary, often doing so at the 5-level.
I did not include mike777 in my dataset.
I did not include mike777 in my dataset.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.
- hrothgar
- hrothgar
#6
Posted 2010-November-19, 09:02
By the way, I may not have been entirely honest in my comment and vote because I think the question in itself is entirely uninteresting. It makes me wonder if asking such questions is also a sign of the wannabe-expert-forum-poster.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.
- hrothgar
- hrothgar
#7
Posted 2010-November-19, 10:40
han, on 2010-November-19, 09:02, said:
It makes me wonder if asking such questions is also a sign of the wannabe-expert-forum-poster.
I would like to make it clear that I only reason I even post anything in the A&E forum is that I consider myself "advanced" by BBO standards. I do not necessarily consider myself "advanced" by other standards, and I do not consider myself "expert" by any standard.
"One of the painful things about our time is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and understanding are filled with doubt and indecision"
-- Bertrand Russell
-- Bertrand Russell
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