Thursday,
December 08, 2005 11:45 AM
Hand
Evaluation – Systemic ( Standard Edmonton Disease )
PITBULLS:
Standard
Edmonton needed a make
over. Standard Edmonton was invented by Edmonton experts back
in the 1970’s , when a new concept was just invented. This new concept was splinters & Edmonton Standard went
“splinter happy” . Every time you made a bid
practically, it
seemed to show a splinter. Over the years, experts realized that in some
instances this bid was a waste , as the splinter helped the opponents too much
with their opening leads or defense.
Also as Garozzo is fond of saying “Bridge is a game of suits”. Splinters took
away the ability for the partnership to show
suits which was not good.
The
first makeover of Standard Edmonton is the strong
jump shift hands into spades at the two level after opening 1♣ or 1♦ . 1♦-P-1♥-P 2♠ or 1♣-P-1♥-P 2♠ . These are strong jump shifts now not splinters !
Bidding at the one level is still a one round
force but these jump shift bids are a game force .You describe your two suits & huge hand in one
bid. There are other ways of
showing singletons with a major suit fit.
6-5 hands without values for a true reverse are
impossible to bid. People distort these hands by opening their 5 card suit
first & bidding their 6 card suit. This is not good as the advantage of a natural system is that you show
your proper distribution & HCP when you
bid. Enter the “jump shift reverse” to show these hand types. In order to play this
“fun toy” something had to go from Standard Edmonton, so that of course was the
splinter. 1♦-P-1♠-P
3♥-P-? . Whenever you reverse and jump shift at the same time it shows a 6-5 10-14 HCP’s and not a
splinter.
Passed hand bidding now throws out splinters. Splinters should suggest a slam as they give so much
information to the enemy. Splinters & WJS as a passed hand are a waste of a good bid as slam is very remote. Enter the strong jump shift
as responder but specifically with
a fit for partner. These are a far more useful bid ,
especially with the cheapest NT now asking for a singleton anyway.
In
competitive auctions,
when the opponents overcall
is another scenario where splinters have out lived their usefulness. You have
fit showing Q bids so with the Italian method
of Q bidding to show 2nd round control , splinters are now history. What is hard to show in
competition is a pre-emptive jump shift. ♠x
♥xx ♦xxx ♣KJ1098xx with partner opening 1♥,‘ the opponents
overcalling 1♠ , 3♣ shows a suit not a singleton.
The
demise of the splinter is Standard Edmonton is now
complete as my partner suggests playing fit showing jumps when we
overcall also passed hand or not.
This means the only place left where we do splinter is after a T/O double &
directly after an opening bid in a major.
Also , a jump after a minor opening in a major at the
3 level is a game forcing splinter. After a direct opening bid in a major , we
“mask” the splinter though to keep out the enemy knowing the location of our
singleton . A 3♣ bid is a splinter in the minors and 3♦ is a mini-splinter
in the other major.
One
final place where a splinter ( void showing) still
exists in our system is the 4 level
in a minor after a major opening. There is a catch though ,
this splinter is Exclusion Blackwood
! 1♥-p-4♣/♦ is indeed a void
show support for partners major but is defined to be Exclusion Blackwood. A
jump to the 4 level in the other major
is still natural however.
Anyway , the makeover of Standard Edmonton the way we play
it now , is complete. The major casualty was the splinter. So long splinter in competition , I knew thee well ….