Tuesday, May 02, 2006 11:25 PM
Hand Evaluation - Cooperative Dbl ( Philosophy )
PITBULLS:
A
D.S.I.P. competitive double is not a
cooperative double as defined for most Bridge players. The D.S.I.P. double has some
common characteristics with the cooperative double but in reality they are direct opposites. The co-operative double
is a depending on context double but it is penalty orientated. Like the D.S.I.P. double , it transfers the final
decision to partner but the philosophy
is different. You leave the
cooperative double in as the default
unless you have some reason to pull the double. This “some reason” is lack of
cards in their suit , length in partners suit or
excessive distribution with no values. Partner wants to know if you are hurting her hand defensively or not.
The
D.S.I.P. double is an offensive tool.
You pull the double as the default unless you have a
reason for converting the double for penalty. The D.S.I.P. double is also a
depending on context bid but only applies with the initial double in a competitive auction. The D.S.I.P. double
leans towards a T/O double as
opposed to a penalty double but it allows for conversion. At very high levels , the D.S.I.P. double converges with the cooperative double. At high levels, the excuse to leave
it in for penalties occurs more frequently.
These levels are the 4 levels or bids that would force you to the 4 level.
The penalty double is also a depending on
context bid. However , the doubler
does not want to transfer the final decision to partner . This trump stack penalty double
is a single handed bid in that I heard your bid ,
their bidding so I want to extract
a penalty most likely because I
have their trump. I am captain of the auction so you just pass. The 5 level dictates that all doubles are penalty so cooperative
& D.S.I.P. doubles do not exist. There are many obvious situations where
the double can be interpreted as penalty
from the bidding.
The
D.S.I.P. competitive double is not
a T/O double per se as it has no unbid suit
requirement. It is just a bid to say “I have
cards” measured in quick tricks so wish to continue competing. A cooperative double
is not a penalty double per se as
we need some help from partner to
extract a penalty from the opponents. A true penalty double ends the auction. These definitions are
needed to distinguish the subtle nature of the beast. The D.S.I.P. double is
a close cousin to the T/O double , the co-operative double a close cousin to the penalty double.