Friday,
December 05, 2003 12:17 AM
Hand
Evaluation - Balancing 3NT Bids
PITBULLS:
The
opponents open a pre-empt at the 3 level so it goes pass around to you in the balancing chair.
Balancing is an art form but there are guidelines . If you are long in their
suit , have an opening bid , you should just
pass & not disturb things. Partner is short in their suit & took no action , so passing is an easy decision . What if you have a strong
NT with a stopper in there suit ? Should
you balance with 3NT ? Well yes & no . If they pre-empt in
spades , a double will get you
past 3NT , so I would balance 3NT
with those hands. Over a 3♥ pre-empt , it
depends on my spade holding . If I have good spades, I double , otherwise I balance 3NT.
If
they pre-empt in a minor , a 3NT balance is based
on playability . This is normally a long other minor with a stopper
in their suit. On rare occasions , you could have a stack in their suit but are
just too strong to pass. A balanced 22 count , you are vul & they are not
will bring out a 3NT bid . The more cards you have in their suit means you are not balancing but just bidding your own
strength. If they are vul & I am not , I probably will let them play it
there & collect +400 the easy way. Partner will always rescue them if I
double. Over a minor pre-empt
, I usually double with a flat
standard no trump opener with a stopper
rather than bid 3NT in the balancing seat. This double over a minor pre-empt assumes I have appropriate cards in the majors.
O.K.
with understandings on what constitutes a 3NT
balance , suit balances are clarified . You always have
the inference that partner did not balance 3NT.
It goes 3♣ , all pass with partner balances 3♦ vul . So you hold ♠Axxx ♥AJ98xx ♦10x ♣x & bid 3♥ , partner bids 3NT
what next ? O.K. if partner has good long diamonds with a club stopper, she would have balanced 3NT originally based on “playability” so you throw that hand out . Partner is likely
to only have one club stopper with
a missing diamond card so 3NT is shakey with a club lead. You gave partner an
opportunity to bid spades , she failed to do so. Based on these inferences you
should retreat to 4♥ as the percentage
contract . On this hand it turns out you make +650 despite losing 2 heart
tricks & 3NT goes one down.
There
are quantitative balances ( HCP’s)
, but they should always start
out with a double. 3♠-P-P-? , you double
so partner bids 4 of a minor . 4NT is to play
showing points in the 20 + range & too strong to balance 3NT. What if you have a
flat 24 HCP in the balancing spot ? The pre-empt gets around to you so you
double . Partner bids something at the 3 level so you jump to 4NT . This is not Blackwood . A general rule is that you must Q bid their suit to clue partner in on
the suit fit before 4NT can be
Blackwood. In fact , in balancing auctions , especially when minors are bid , a good generalization is
4NT can never be Blackwood !!
Always
double with huge balanced hands
after pre-empts as you have more options. If you have a distributional demand
two , make a Goren style Q bid.
4-4-4-1 hands are balanced per se , so avoid a Q bid with these very strong
hands. A double will do nicely.