Monday, March 19, 2007 2:37 AM
Hand Evaluation – Tactics ( Approach Forcing )
PITBULLS:
Modern
bidding is an “approach forcing” system. What does this mean
? This means that whenever responder bids a new suit , it is forcing. Before “approach forcing’ became in vogue , you had to jump to force. Strong jump
shifts by responder , strong jump preferences &
jumps after 2/1 bidding were needed to force & show a good hand before
approach forcing came into vogue.
The
modern style means jumps or fast arrival to game
means something altogether different from strength. In a 2/1 auction
since it is forcing to game , a jump in a suit does not
show strength but suit quality. I like to generalize &
play all jumps in a suit to show good suit quality rather
than strength. Jumps to a new suit in a 2/1 auction are splinters.
Jumps to 3NT show specifically hands that evaluate to a strong NT. Fast arrival
to game in a Q bidding auction or otherwise says I have nothing extra but more importantly , I lack a control to Q bid.
Sometimes
it is best to go back to the “old ways” where jumps were needed to force
thereby showing your slam intentions immediately. This
modern notion is recovering the useful forms of the strong jump
shift & jump preference. The useful jump shifts by responder is where you
show a good suit or a fit rather than just a lot of
HCP’s. Jump rebids by responder
show a slam going hand with a good suit. In order to play this , you need to beef up your weak jump shifts so that a
simple rebid of your suit is invitational. Fit showing jump shifts
as a passed hand are becoming standard bidding.
Playing
a structure like XYZ allows you to play strong jump shifts & jump
preferences by responder. Why ? Because all game
forcing hands are shown by a 2♦ bid &
all invitational hands with a 2♣ bid. This leaves the jump shifts & jump
preferences to be picture bids with distribution that show your
slam hand immediately rather than approach forcing. Approach
forcing has its advantages but showing your intentions are not
one of them as you can make a forcing bid with any
strength or suit quality & length. This means by necessity
, you are captain of the auction so it is hard to enlist partner’s help
in the auction. 4th suit forcing is very much “approach forcing “.
Here
is a good auction that shows fast arrival in action.
♠AKxxx ♥xx ♦AKQxx ♣x opposite
♠x ♥Qx ♦J10xx ♣AKQJxx
1♠-P-2♣-P
2♦-P-3♦-P
3♠-P-5♦-P
fast arrival to show no heart control. Partner denies a heart
control by bypassing hearts to show the spade control first ( rank of suits ) .
Ranks
of suits enter into the equation of approach forcing. When you bid
as responder you anticipate partner’s problems by taking the ranks
of suits into consideration. You also choose bids depending
on the context of the auction. If you fit partners hand , you make a more positive bid . If you so not , you make more of a “death response”. As responder when
you approach game , you bid your suits in the correct
order to conserve bidding room. Here is a very poorly bid hand recently
from the Beijing Olympiad where responder violated the rank order of suits. ♠x ♥Kx ♦AJ9xx ♣1098xx partner
opens 2♣ & you bid 2♠ in accordance with your methods to show controls.
Opener now bids 3♠ so the cheapest & most practical bid you can make is
3NT. This may right side the 3NT & also leaves room for
partner to describe her hand. In addition , you
are giving a death response with a stiff in partner’s suit as you
have already shown your controls anyway. The 2nd best bid by
responder after 3♠ by partner is 4♣ as again you are bidding your lower
ranking suit first to preserve bidding room & anticipating
partner’s problems. 4♦ may pre-empt partner from
showing her club suit ! The absolute worst bid you can
make is 4♦ . Since you bypassed both
3NT & 4♣ to bid a higher ranking suit , you give the impression that
you have a single suited hand. Do not bid a two suited hand
the same as you would a one suited hand in all facets of Bridge bidding !! Help partner out as you have not found a
fit yet. 7♣ makes with a 2-2 break & they never found their club fit L. The 4♦ bid
completely pre-empted partner as well as misdescribing
responder’s hand.