Friday, January 05, 2007 6:14 AM
Hand Evaluation – Setup Man
PITBULLS:
D.S.I.P.
doubles were also designed to assist partnerships when the opponents pre-empt at the 3 level in the sandwich
position. Opener must double
with a good defensive hand (Thrump or cards ) & if she just bids ( 3 or 4 level ) , forcing passes are not turned on with 3 of the 4
vulnerabilities. BJ Trelford held ♠x ♥Axx ♦KQJxxxx
♣Kx
, opened 1♦
both vul. I responded 1♥ ,
there was a 3♠
pre-empt in the sandwich position. The double is the only bid ( other than a Q bid ) that turns on
forcing passes . BJ decided that
our side did not “own the auction” & he bid 4♥ based on distribution. My RHO got into the
act & bid 4♠.
I
held ♠x ♥QJ1098x ♦10x ♣AQ9x so I prefer that we play
this hand. I would like to bid at the 5 level so I double asking permission to
do so. BJ accepts the offer to play the hand but he does so by bidding 5♦. This gets doubled so with favourable club
spots gets rewarded for +750. The negative inference that BJ did not double 3♠ is the key to the auction.
D.S.I.P. doubles are like a setup man in baseball , they turn on forcing passes ! This allows the freedom to bid on distribution without partner getting
carried away. Bids have entirely different meanings when forcing pass theory is
not turned on. My double now changes from penalty to asking permission to bid.
What
would a 5♣ bid by me mean ? Since forcing passes are not turned on , this bid
must show a very strong hand .
This is a slam try knowing that partner previously just bid on distributional
values. Possibly with a hand like ♠x ♥QJ109xx ♦Ax ♣AQJx where 6♦
would be cold. A 5♥
bid by me would mean I think we can make it or even bid because I feel 4♠ would make & 5♥ would be a good tactical bid. Switching back & forth from D.S.I.P. &
forcing pass theory takes bidding skill
& reading the clues correctly. D.S.I.P. theory is not for beginners.
When
we are vul & they are not , a
D.S.I.P. double or otherwise strength showing double opposite an opening hand or equivalent (T/O
dbl ) sets up forcing passes if they
bid a nv game in our auction. Your hand ♠void
♥10xxx ♦AKxxx ♣AKxx 1♠-X-2♠-X
4♠-?
This
pass is forcing by the “setup rule”
as partner doubled to show values opposite a good hand. When a
D.S.I.P. double or competitive action has taken place a 2ND double
is penalty. The D.S.I.P. double ealier in the auction can setup forcing passes
by the simple fact that this is our hand.