Saturday, May 13, 2006 8:07 PM
Hand
Evaluation – Partnership ( Constructive Bidding )
PITBULLS:
Discipline or lack of discipline determines your style of playing Bridge. If your style
is just bidding to complicate things for the opponents ,
partner can not
read anything into your bidding.
♠K987 ♥x ♦xxxx ♣xxxx The auction goes
1♥-P-P-X
2♦-3♣-?
A disciplined player knowing
that partner did not XX or bid 3♦ would not bid. This is a fight that we can not possibly win when partner just bids 2♦. A bid should mean that given my initial pass , I have a hand that may
warrant a sacrifice later on. Holding only 4♦ with a stiff in partners first suit
that is the last message you want to convey to partner. Assume you do encourage
partner by bidding 3♦ with them reaching 4♠. You now have an
obligation to undo
your previous encouragement & make a penalty double .
Do not forget that you have
a partner. 4♠X goes for 300 so
partner thought he had the green light to bid 5♦ when you passed.
This went for a telephone number & it was a pseudo also as they were in the
wrong game.
D.S.I.P.
competitive doubles have a fail safe built into the
structure. If they own the auction with you being a nuisance , a double says I am “asking permission” to sacrifice
with defensive tricks. 4♠X now gets converted
so all is well. When bidding is meaningless , all you
can do is believe the opponents & pass. Bridge is no longer a partnership
game so you may as well go to a Casino . Gambling is a very single handed endeavour.
.
D.S.I.P.
competitive doubles allow you to play an undisciplined
style if you want. The fact that partner did not double after showing a distributional hand , means he
does not have a good defensive hand. Opener had a shapely hand
, opened 1♦ & the vul opponents
overcalled 2♣ . Partner passes , they bid 2♥ so opener bids 2♠. They bid 3♣ , you now bid 3♦ so they bid 3♥. Pass around to you
again. You have the inference that partner does not want to compete with a good hand as he did not double. You pass so they miss a vul
game. Responder bid again , to push them into their cold vulnerable game.
Do
not forget that forcing passes can be turned on even for a pre-empting partner. If partner opens 3♦ vul , you contract
for a vul game with the opponents coming into your
auction, forcing passes are turned on . Same with a double after a weak two . This double says we own the auction. 2♠-3♠-X it is silly telling the weak two that you have spade support to invite competing. The double says “let me
at them” but more than that it turns on
forcing passes & invites the pre-empter
to double also.
Garazzo says do not
enter a fight that you can not
win. If they have the ammunition , do not
bid just to hear yourself talk.
All it does is help the
opponents. They having the bully suit or the majors
, you are beat before you start so why
bid again ? Good opponents
will not let you buy it so you may give wrong information to partner. Pushing opponents into their best spot is a serious Bridge error.
Green pass cards have a lot to do with bidding in Bridge. Discipline & the
pass card are a good marriage. “Anybody can bray like a Jackass” a wise Bridge
player once said. There is an art to passing
when it is right.
Splintering
at the 4 level with any vulnerability should turn on forcing passes & say
we own the hand. Why give information to the enemy otherwise
? If it is their hand , they will buy the
contract so you have helped them play the hand. Playing a disciplined style , you need to identify the difference between competing vrs ownership of auction. Otherwise you are
just bidding to impede the opponents all the time so that defines your style. A partner is not required playing this style.
Whether
you have bought into D.S.I.P. theory or not , you must put partner in the picture. The double is
the most versatile bid to say that you want
to bid again bit with a good defensive hand or
we own the auction for forcing pass purposes. Bidding again removes one of your
options & partner does not know if you bidding to compete or
bidding again because you have a good hand.
Constructive bidding means when you bid again you are doing it for a purpose. D.S.I.P. theory allows you to truly compete better.