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Slam Bidding (RKC)
Once a partnership is in the slam zone, either
player might use Blackwood.
"Regular" Blackwood:
4NT asks for aces and then:
5
= 0 or 4 aces
5
= 1 ace
5
= 2 aces
5
= 3 aces
The asker can then bid 5NT to ask for kings,
with the same schedule of replies, one level higher.
This convention has been around since the
1940's. It is a most helpful convention, but is often misused and
abused. Blackwood should not be used as a crutch to
determine if there is a slam, but more to make sure that
you don't reach a slam off 2 aces (nor a grand slam off 1 ace).
For examples of the typical misuse of Blackwood,
please read my article on slam
bidding. A good rule of thumb:
If the answer to Blackwood won't tell
you if you belong in slam, then don't use it.
What is RKC and why use it?
Just as we don't want to bid a slam off 2 aces,
neither do we want to bid a slam off an ace and the trump king.
Such a slam would be at best 50-50--and there is no need to bid
it. Also, we would never want to bid a grand slam off an ace. Nor,
would we want to bid seven if missing the trump king. RKC is used
to make sure we never reach a slam if missing too many
"key" cards (aces and the trump king).
RKC stands for Roman KeyCard Blackwood. There
are several variations, but the mainstream method in use today is
:
4NT asks for "aces" and then:
5
= 1 or 4 "aces" (note: some players reverse the
meanings of 5
and 5 )
5
= 0 or 3 "aces"
5
= 2 or 5 "aces" (no trump queen)
5
= 2 of 5 "aces" (with trump queen)
Why the "quote" marks? Therein lies
the essence of "keycards." Instead of "aces,"
RKC is used to ask about keycards. What are keycards? The 4 aces
and the trump king. So, there are 5 "key cards." What is
the trump king? There will always be a "trump king."
Common practice is to assume the trump suit is the suit the
partnership first agreed on (bid and raised). If no suit was
agreed, it is assumed to be the last-bid suit. (There are several
variations and trouble areas, but usually there is no problem
knowing which suit contains the trump king.)
So, after 1 -3 -4NT,
the responder with each hand below would use the chart above to
make the response shown:
K1093
KQJ2
Q5
742
Answer: 5
to show 1 Keycard (that "key" card is the K).
Q1093
KQ42
K5
742
Answer: 5
to show 0 Keycards
K1093
AK42
J5
742
Answer: 5
to show 2 Keycards ( K,
A,
no trump queen)
AQ109
A432
J5
742
Answer: 5
to show 2 Keycards ( A,
A
+ trump Queen)
Notes:
>Some players invert the responses of 5
and 5
(they use 5
to show 0 or 3 and 5
to show 1 or 4). This was the way the convention was first
published (it was more in line with the responses to
"regular" Blackwood). The method shown at the top of
this article (5
= 1 or 4, 5 =
0 or 3) is becoming the more popular way. Sometimes, it is
referred to as "1430" -- because the responses in order
show 1-4 3-0. Also, 1430 is the score for 6
or 6
vulnerable. This method (1430) is recommended, because the 5
response (1 ace) comes up much more frequently than the 5
response (0 aces). It is best to have more room for follow-ups
(and to stop in 5
if clubs are trump).
>After the 5
and 5
response, opener can ask for the trump queen. The most common way
is to bid the next step (5
over 5 ,
5
over 5 )
to ask. The responder then signs off in 5-of-the-trump suit if he
lacks the trump queen. With the trump queen, he jumps to 6 of the
trump suit (if he has no kings to show). With the trump queen and
kings to show, he bids the suit in which he has the cheapest king.
This queen-ask mechanism confuses most intermediate-level players.
I'd recommend avoiding it unless you are quite used to RKC and
very experienced.
>5NT (by the 4NT bidder) asks for kings
(aside from the already accounted for trump king). Some people
show the number of kings. Others bid the suit in which they have
the cheapest king. The former is simpler. The latter is more
effective, but complex. Also, the latter is hard to use unless
spades (or sometimes hearts) are trump--there isn't enough space.
RKC is a useful tool for experienced players. It
is probably the method that causes the most accidents. Be prepared
to have some catastrophes if you use this convention.
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