Thanks for all the input - very useful!
On hand 1 it was partner in the West seat. He passed 5H and it made. I like 5C the first time, that puts the opponents on the spot immediately and they probably wouldn't have found 5H (can't remember the full hand).
Hand 2 was when the opponents
conveniently forgot* to arrow-switch the board. Their auction was 2H (strong)-4H; 4NT-5H; 5NT-6D; 7H which I really don't like - for a start, opposite a strong two North should make a slam try, and of course you shouldn't use Blackwood with a void.
My partner and I debated how we'd bid it (no exclusion, only very basic RKC). We thought the South hand was worth a game-forcing 2D (equivalent to 2C in standard). Then 2S (any positive) response followed by 3H-4C; 4D-4NT; 5C-5D; 5S-5NT; 6H-7H or similar. Here 5C is 0 or 3, 5D is asking for the HQ, 5S shows the HQ, 5NT asks for kings, 6D shows two. I'm going to send partner some instructions on the more standard responses to RKC soon
, but the question is whether North can judge that, facing two kings, the major-suit aces and the HQ (plus a bit more) that the grand is good. I guess the worst-case is that partner tables the CK and not the SK and you end up needing the spade finesse.
* this is 100% a joke - the opponents concerned wouldn't even dream of cheating in their sleep.
Hand 3 raised a lot of discussion. Again partner was West and bid 4S over 3D arguing that was by far the most likely place the hand was to be played - which seems fair enough. I suggested X then bid spades but it was felt maybe the hand is lacking in strength a little for that. 4C non-leaping Michaels would be a useful agreement to have...
If partner doubled, I would have bid 4S and then we might have got to slam, but it requires finding the club queen which was in the "wrong" hand (South).
Hand 4 cost us 12 IMPs when we played 4H-1 and the other table played 4SX=. I opened 3S and partner passed the double. South bid 4H and that was that.
I'm surprised at the number of votes for 4S here. The hand has good shape and a nice suit but it is missing the AK, the clubs aren't great and we are vul against not. Asking around at tonight's game, I got a lot of support for what my partner and I agreed should have been done - I open 3S and partner raises to 4S.
The funny thing is that apparently the West hand was opened a Multi 2D at the other table! It's WAYYYY too good for a weak two, but about two aces short of a strong two, so I'm not entirely sure what that was all about.
Tonight's game was awesome and we should have won. No scribbled-down hands though - there are hand records for a start, and the only interesting ones are three "how do you make this double-dummy" questions. Perhaps I'll post them if they're suitable for intermediates to wrangle with.
ahydra