Next: Negative Doubles
Up: Bridge Bidding
Previous: Rebids by opener
A convention is a certain bid or set of bids that do not convey the natural
meaning, but are artificial bids meant to convey certain information to the
bidder's partner. For instance, the Stayman bid mentioned over
1NT is a
convention. The bid of 2 is not meant to convey a club suit but rather
intended to ask the 1NT bidder if he has a 4 card major suit.
- Blackwood
- This a very powerful convention that is used by
almost every player in the game of bridge. Whenever you and partner
have found a place to play (a suit or no-trump) and you are sure you
have a chance for slam, information about where your partner's points
are can be very useful. Therefore, the Blackwood convention was
created. This says that over a non-NT bid, a bid of 4NT is
asking for how many aces partner has. The responses are:
- 5 - 0 or 4 aces
- 5 - 1 aces
- 5 - 2 aces
- 5 - 3 aces.
If your partnership has all four aces, 5NT is a continuation of the
asking sequence asking partner to repond with the number of kings he
holds. The responses are:
- 6 - 0 or 4 kings
- 6 - 1 kings
- 6 - 2 kings
- 6 - 3 kings.
Remember: only continue by asking for kings when you are sure
you have all the aces or you may end up in a 7-level contract missing
an ace, and you can be sure the defense will take that ace right away!
- Gerber
- This is another very helpful convention to learn. As
you recall, in the description of the Blackwood convention, we said
that the Blackwood 4NT bid should only be used over a non-no-trump
bid. So how do you ask for aces after your side has just bid
no-trump? This is where the Gerber convention comes in. The Gerber
convention says that over a no-trump bid, a jump to 4 is now asking
for aces. The responses are similar to those used in Blackwood; they
are:
- 4 - 0 or 4 aces
- 4 - 1 aces
- 4 - 2 aces
- 4NT - 3 aces.
Again if your partnership has all four aces, 5 is a continuation of the
asking sequence asking partner to repond with the number of
kings he holds. The responses are:
- 5 - 0 or 4 kings
- 5 - 1 kings
- 5 - 2 kings
- 5NT - 3 kings.
Remember: Please read the warning under
the Blackwood conventional bid.
- Quantitative Slam Try
- This is another useful convention. This
one however isn't quite as commonly used as the two above. QST says
that when partner opens with 1NT, 2NT, or 3NT and you have enough points
for slam (see first page for points necessary for slam), you can now
respond with 4 NT and this asks partner to bid 6NT with the maximum
number of points for his bid (18 for 1NT, 21 for 2NT, 27 for 3NT)
and to pass otherwise.
Next: Negative Doubles
Up: Bridge Bidding
Previous: Rebids by opener