CSGibson, on 2012-June-07, 10:21, said:
They bid it first. 4c is technically a cue bid, and it's above 3n. And, to be fair, you do have 1st round club control...all of which adds up to "suck it opps"
Funny you say this, as that was one of my points to the interloper.
By the way, as no one else has come up with a term to describe this call, I will share again my term. In other sequences, I have used a call that I describe as a "Steppingstone Bid." The concept is this. In some sequences (this being an example), a call might be made where the opponents are the ones who are forced. Most calls force partner to bid, invite paretner to bid, do not induce any calls at all from partner, suggest that partner not bid, or demand that partner not bid. The unique situation here is that the OPPONENTS are forced to act. They are "forced" because the situation requires them, for bridge scoring reasons, to either bid or to double, as they cannot afford to defend the contract undoubled.
In that situation, this force on the opponents allows partner to not be forced (he can clearly pass), and it has an advantage of allowing better stacking, For one, as one option for the opponents is to double, this "Steppingstone Bid" often induces pass and redouble as options at your next move. But, it also allows what might normally be a relay to actually be one of the options.
Consider Cappelletti 2
♣ (one-suiter). Normally, this forces a 2
♦ relay, although an override is possible (pass with long clubs). If Advancer is known to be weak, and Overcaller is known to be weak, such that the opponents have GF strength, and the colors white on red, then playing 2
♣ as non-forcing makes some sense. If no one bids, play 2
♣, potentially -8 for -400 and a probable top. So, the opponents have to bid. Because they have to bid, you now can show all four suits at the two-level, meaning that you can get out at 2
♣. So, the call is a "Steppingstone Bid," because the opponents must cooperate with a double, which then allows you to unwind your hand off of their double. (By the way, this sort of NF Capp 2
♣ also allows 2
♣ to show any one suit OR any two-suiter, as you can redouble with the two-suiter hands, proving well the value of the Steppingstone Bid as a stacking tool.)
In this actual situation, bidding 4
♣ as "diamonds plus either clubs or spades" works as a steppingstone bid. Granted, this was an undiscussed steppingstone bid, but the beauty of steppingstone bids is that they generally are self-executing even without discussion, assuming that a double-enabled later move can be properly interpreted.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.