mikeh, on Aug 17 2007, 02:57 AM, said:
Treating AQ/AK/KQ/AKQ all the same way seems to leave responder not very far ahead.
Consider the actual hand, and play around with these holdings in clubs, and we see that there are many hands on which AK is good, AQ not bad and KQ not good.
But, it is better (I suspect) than nothing

And maybe there are followups that help clarify the situation.
This actually helps quite a bit here.
Opener's hand was
♠Axxx
♥Kx
♦AKJ
♣KQJx. I would not consider this right for a super-accept anyway, as I do not have five assured cover cards. I'm close, but I cannot cater to any side stiff.
Responder held
♠J9xxx
♥AQxxx
♦xx
♣x. He needed five true covers, and maybe even six. He is missing seven critical cards, the A-K-Q of spades, heart K, diamond A-K, and club A. With six of these, slam is obvious. With the "right" five, slam has play, maybe on a heart finesse or on running hearts and a diamond sluff or two, for instance.
Switch Opener's club and spade honors, and Opener has
♠KQxx
♥Kx
♦AKJ
♣AJxx, which is five assured covers (actually 5 1/2). That's strong enough for a super-accept, IMO.
If Opener super-accepts, he will bid, with this new hand, 4
♦, showing depth in diamonds, which is what Responder wants to hear.
Granted, Opener might have
♦A/
♣AK, which is just as good, but then Opener might accept/decline a LTTC with this hand.
"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.