Trinidad, on 2012-December-05, 18:10, said:
The other problem is that 6NT is the "let's end this misery" bid. It prevents all kinds of troubles by taking matters in your own hand. You take partner out of the picture, avoiding the consequences that the misunderstanding (that you only know of through the UI) might have.
I don't know much about these players, but I know what I would do. I would set clubs as trumps. I want to get into a cuebidding sequence and I want to find out whether 7♣ or 7NT might be a good contract. The way to do that is by bidding 3♣ (GF in this sequence when playing weak NTs) and involving partner.
Even when you generally like blasting, you cannot maintain that trying for a constructive auction is not an LA. And 6NT is demonstrably suggested over 3♣ by the UI, so the 6NT bid is an infraction.
Rik
3 things:
1: I'm never, ever bidding 3♣ (which many people play as minimum ish even though I agree 2N is GF and this is not best), 3♥ is the obvious start particularly if 2♣ denies 4M if you're getting scientific.
2: Choosing to blast 6N at pairs is utterly normal rather than pinpointing the lead. It's entirely possible you have 13 tricks if opps don't find their ace or AK. This can easily be a hand where partner has no diamond card, and you are getting a bottom if you use any science and tell the opps this, say KQx, KQx, Qx, KJxxx or KQJ, KQx, xxx, KJxx or KQJx, KQ, Kxx, Kxxx, . While 5♣= may be par, it won't score well unless the opening leader has AK♦.
3: If you decide you want to bid 3♥ and you don't know what 3♠ would mean over this (diamond stop no spade stop or spade card looking for club slam ?) in an unpracticed partnership, you may want to avoid the murk for reasons unconnected with the infraction.