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Slam Bidding - Gerber Ace Asking Bid

Usually you are deciding between bidding a Game or a Small Slam if you or your partner go Ace Asking.
With Gerber you cannot bid 5C straight away asking for Kings - you must Ace ask first even though you may know where all the Aces are located. A jump straight into 5C without Ace asking first will be interpreted as a natural suit bid.
After you have replied to your partners Ace ask they may want to know about your holding in Kings - to do this they will bid 5 and you will need again to count how many kings you have and bid according to the table below. If the Slam is in a trump suit, a singleton may sometimes be counted as a King If the partner who initiates Gerber subsequently then bids 5 , that means that they are asking for you to show the number of kings in your hand. Responses to 5 is same as your responses to 4(Ace asking) , but at one level higher. Responses for the kings are below.

 

Partners
Gerber Bid  
 What your response means   Your
Bid  
Bidding Sequence  
           
4  Holding 0 or 4 Kings 4  4 - 4
4  Holding 1 King 4  4 - 4
4  Holding 2 Kings 4  4 - 4
4  Holding 3 Kings 4NT  4 - 4NT

Table of responses to Partners Ace Ask



Practice your Gerber Ace Asking Responses


   4
   4
   5
   5 NT



   4
   4
   4
   5 NT



   5
   5
   5
   4NT



   4
   4
   4
   4NT



   4
   4
   5
   4NT




Partner Responds 2H to your 2C(Game Force) Opening Bid

What Ace Asking Bid will you make with this hand?

  • A 7 5
  • A K Q 6 5 3
  • K J
  • A K

You can't use 4C as the contract is going to be in Hearts and partner will interpret 4C as a strong club suit bid. You must use Blackwood Ace and King Asking 4NT/5NT to see if you can bid Grand Slam