Friday,
December 01, 2006 1:05 AM
Hand Evaluation – Tactics ( Showing Intentions )
PITBULLS:
When
you start an auction by immediately showing your hand, it simplifies auctions. By
opening 1NT or 2NT , you describe your distribution & HCP’s in
one fell swoop. Partner has an advantage as he has a great deal of
information immediately. The strong jump shift by responder
was one of those bids. If you describe a slam try with a good suit in one
bid immediately, the auction is
off to a great start. In the Goren days ,
everybody played strong jump shifts by responder as indeed it did
simplify auctions. What the bid does is “change captaincy” .
If you have an unbiddable strong hand , try to force partner to make the
final decision by describing your hand to her . Captaincy in
itself is a hand evaluation concept.
Over
the years , the strong jump shift by responder became
extinct as it just took up too much bidding room. 4th
suit forcing replaced the bid. But 4th suit forcing has many flaws. Partner
does not really know your intentions early in the auction like
the “good old days” with a strong jump shift. The 4th suit
forcing bid is just too ambiguous. Like all 4th suit forcing auctions , you go into contortions to describe your hand .
Even after tortuous sequences , partner still might
not get the true picture.
In
recent years , experts wanted to make a compromise
between old & new. They wanted to “recover the strong jump shift” & in some
instances , the strong jump preference. They looked for places where
invitational bids were not really needed as you could play XYZ . Alternatively you have an inference that bidding
& rebidding your suit was invitational. This opened up a jump rebid
by responder as showing a Goren style strong jump shift. With one
bid , you show a slam try with a good suit
& announce your intentions immediately.
Here
is my partner & myself in action tonight. I had ♠AKQJxx
♥Axxx ♦x ♣Ax , partner opened 1♣ . I had
a classic Goren strong jump shift. I have a good suit with slam aspirations but
I must respond 1♠. Partner
rebid 2♣ , so I bid 3♠ showing the Goren strong jump shift hand.
Partner had a mental picture of my hand immediately as I showed my suit
& intentions early . Partner had ♠x ♥xxx ♦AKQ ♣ KQ1098x , can not bid 3NT so he bid 4♠. I bid KCB so partner showed
one Ace. I bid 5NT confirming all the controls, so partner made an excellent bid of
7♣. He is showing a source of tricks & a choice of contracts. I converted
the hand to 7NT as a bidding “safety play” to protect against a bad club break or
a bad spade break. If the spades broke badly , I
still had 13 tricks in NT with the club suit.
The
key to this auction was avoiding 4th suit forcing
thereby putting partner into the picture immediately. This is a huge
advantage of the strong jump shift that we are all missing with modern
bidding. If you can recover some of the ideas from the Goren days , you will be surprised how auctions become
simplified. Opening strong 2’s like a strong 2♦
or an ACOL 2♦, is
another example of returning to the Goren days. 2♦
shows your intentions & suit immediately.
Bridge
is a partnership game & by showing your intentions early , partner gets in on the
act. The “serious 3NT” Q bid was designed to show your serious
slam intentions immediately. Here is a nice auction using this
tool. Rodwell held ♠KQJxxx
♥AJ10 ♦Axx x & opened 1♠ . Meckstroth bid 2♥ with ♠Ax
♥KQ98x ♦xxxx ♣AQ , Rodwell
bid 3♥. Meckstroth Q
bid 3NT saying he had serious slam intentions so Rodwell took control of the auction via KCB & drove the
hand to 7♥. Since one partner let his intentions
known early , the other hand could easily take
control. Vive la difference between these & the cumbersome 4th
suit forcing auctions ! I dislike 4th suit forcing.
Switching
captaincy some times makes an unbiddable hand to a biddable one. You hold ♠AKJxxx ♥Ax ♦Axxxx ♣void &
you hear partner open 1♥. You respond 1♠ , partner rebids 2♣. You bid 2♦
& partner bids 3♦ so now what
? This is the classic case of duplication of value. If partners HCP’s
are in diamonds instead of clubs , you will have a
diamond slam. How do you find out ? The solution is to
switch captaincy to partner. You show your slam intentions & let
partner decide. You bid 3♠ followed by 3NT by partner, you now bid 4♦
showing your two suiter & by pulling 3NT to 4 of
a minor , a slam try. Partner now evaluates her hand on how her HCP’s fit your
two suits. Partner held ♠x ♥KQxxx ♦Jxx
♣AKxx only 1 HCP in your two suits , so
signs off in 5♦ which makes. Give partner more
in diamonds & she bids the slam. Bridge is a partnership game
!