Saturday, November 11, 2006 8:45 AM
Hand Evaluation -
Openers ( Modern Bidding )
PITBULLS:
The
following is a quote from Eric Kokish in this month’s bulletin “another reason
to open sound hands & not the modern garbage” . Reviewing
the Bridge World accounts of Bermuda Bowls , NABC team
games it is easy to spot the era where “modern bidding” began to take place. In the 1970’s &1980’s the pros more or
less behaved. In the 1990’s , they went off
the deep end. Meckwell due to their club system deemed that everything that was not
opened 1♣ forcing did not have
to be an opening bid. Marty Bergen went off the deep end with weak two’s &
pre-empts & disregarding vulnerability. They even wrote books describing
their modern “bidding style” . They got good results
& horrible results. Good results because unsuspecting
opponents went wrong . This was because they could not believe they would
do such outrageous things that have been taboo in Bridge since it was
invented. Over time, opponents have become more wary so
their good results ( surprise attack ) have taken a turn for the worse except in
weak fields.
Bridge
pros by the nature of their occupation must
play singled handed.
Their clients drop the ball with
partnership concepts such as forcing passes, captaincy ,
bidding your hand again , disciplined openers & pre-empts. The best way to
win is to make the opponents go wrong with swing tactics. As results make or break their livelihood , this is the style in
which they resorted . This style
was panned incessantly by the Bridge World in the 1990’s, but to no avail. They were not about
to change as they got results & all teams seemed to have a client on it.
A
bad side effect is what I see in
club games , sectionals & regionals
today. The average players taking a page from the pro’s books
, think that this is the right way to play Bridge. Horrible openers ,
horrible pre-empts , horrible 2 level overcalls & undisciplined single handed style . Bidding & partnership
Bridge has virtually become a joke. Bridge has been downgraded to VLT
status. You spin the wheels so
whatever happens , happens.
In
the 2000’s , good teams like the Italians , Poles ,
& Scandinavians decided to stop this
nonsense. The Italians
play good disciplined Bridge .
This is one reason I was cheering for them in Bermuda Bowls against the swingy
Americans led by Meckwell. Kokish
and others have become more vocal in the Bridge World magazine & elsewhere
complaining about “modern bidding”.
I watched the Italian team on vugraph from the recent Beijing event. They proved to me once again that destructive modern bidding is not the way to play this game. Here is a comment from a commentator on Vugraph during the late stages of an Italian match.
“Brolucius→Table: I mentioned in the previous set that it is in the constructive bidding that the Italians are so excellent. They do not make any particular effort in obstructive bidding, unlike ... some other teams.”
Here is a hand that was a disaster in the final match with
a Canadian team trying to qualify in the mixed teams. You are first seat
vulnerable ♠Qxx ♥K ♦AQ10x ♣Jxxxx
with 1
½ quick tricks with your suit being the minors. I would not open this
hand in a million years as I am just setting partner up for failure. This hand
was opened & the final contract was 3NTX by the opponents making for an
overtrick –950 & a terrible start to a key match. The match went down hill from there. These types of hands are psychologically
devastating for a team.
Why do you want to do that ? They feel passing with 12
HCP’s with a stiff king & little defense is a modern “no no” . Time
after time I watched teams in the Beijing Olympiad who did this sort of thing get poor results.
Most bad results can be traced to a poor start by opening a hand that is nowhere near an opening bid. This modern
style of “opening bids”
is a disease that
needs to wiped out & left in the hand of pro’s playing with clients. Shooting dice & Bridge are a poor
mix.
Locally
we have many
modern bidders .
Maurice & Klimo subscribes to modern bidding
philosophy as does Osama , Willard,
Chris Buchanan , Ray Grace & anybody as a partner to name a few. In
order to play against them effectively , you need to
know your forcing pass theory ,
pre-empt understandings &
be very disciplined with your
openers & overcalls yourself. You do not fight fire with fire. D.S.I.P. Competitive
doubles assist as an antidote against modern bidding tactics. Modern bidders
are essentially Bridge terrorists who eventually implode & bring the team
down with them. Tom Gandolfo was kibitzing the Meckwell match recently at the Houston Vanderbilit
& noted that Greco & Hampson played D.S.I.P. competitive
doubles. Meckwell went for -800 &
a few other numbers against this competitive bidding tool. Meckwell was -90
IMPS behind going into the 4th quarter & that was too much for
even them to overcome so they lost the match.
In
the long run ,
singlehanded Bridge cannot work in
a partnership game. Luck has a way of evening out so the poor decisions made
due to single handed actions result in devastating
losses. Here is an auction a while back . Lorna
opened 1♥ , I overcalled
1♠ so Peter Jones bid 4♥. My partner bid 4♠ , passed around to Peter who bid 5♥
doubled by my partner. This auction is not allowed in partnership
Bridge. Once Peter has pre-empted to 4♥ , captaincy reverts to the opener. This is modern bidding at its
worst as Peter had exactly what he announced to partner previously. You insult
partner’s decision of willing to defend by bidding your hand again because you decided it was right. Modern bidding
violates captaincy quite often because “Bridge is a bidders
game”. You just bid without a purpose
& call it “modern bidding”. VLT’s anybody ?