Tuesday, October 03, 2006
4:23 PM
Hand Evaluation – Responding ( tactics )
PITBULLS:
In
this day & age, I feel responding to an
opening bid is just another example of “playing the vulnerability”.
In IMPS , I loathe the practice of opening huge hands at
the one level . This horrible practice encourages partner to respond on anything just to keep
the bidding open. This of course , gets your own
partner quite often as she takes you for your word. A response shows 6 HCP & above unless you
have 4 or more of partners major. Some sort of pre-emption is in order with
those “fit “ hands.
NV vrs vul (
terrorist vul ) is a different matter. Letting
the opponents have a free run to their vul game is tactically unsound. If you have a
fit for partner’s major with not enough HCP’s ,
manufacture some sort of bid. Bidding a forcing NT might disrupt the opponents.
A simple raise can be surprisingly pre-emptive. I opened 1♥ nv
vrs vul , partner held ♠ Qxxxx
♥xxxx ♦xx ♣xx so what should he
bid ? Bidding 4♥ directly is probably too much with this flat hand. I
would try 1NT forcing in order to muddy the waters however Osama & others
may have more creative bids to make. One thing you do not do is pass on
this one vulnerability. On all other vulnerabilities ,
I would pass 1♥ as you are just misleading partner into a minus.
An
exception would be if I held the above hand & partner opened in 3rd seat with any
vulnerability. I would bid for tactical reasons.
Table position as well as vulnerability changes our responding style. The response has become as much a tactical weapon as the light opening bid.
As usual with tactical bids , avoid taking partner
down with you by misleading bids. Have table position & vulnerability on
your side , so as to keep partner’s blood pressure at
a reasonable level.
Quite
often partner has a big hand with the majors & opens 1♣. You have 4
or 5 HCP’s with 5-4 in the majors so you pass. You play it one club or they
balance with a NT etc & you find to your dismay
that you could have made
4 of a major. This is one of the downfalls of playing a natural system
as opposed to a forcing club system . What my partner’s & I
have done, is
to use the jump to 2♦ to avoid these
disasters after a 1♣ opener. A 2♦ jump to a 1♣ opener
shows 5-4 or 5-5 in the majors with 4-8 HCP’s. We have bids to ask about the
exact distribution & whether you are maximum
or minimum. This bid prevents you from responding when you do not
have a response just to
cater to partners possible huge opening bid holding the majors. If you are going to do such things
, do it
systemically so partner is on your side.