2008-02-19 13:49
Hand Evaluation – Ownership (The Opponents Bidding )
PITBULLS:
Using
the opponents bidding to assist your own bidding is a dangerous practice in a weak field. As they do not know what they
are doing ,
they are in effect practicing
deception. You take their bids for face value so they mislead you
very badly. Yes , this is normal stuff & there is
no known cure. However, against decent to
expert opponents you must believe them or you will be in trouble. You must know when they “own the auction” so
you can avoid disasters.
Tom
Gandolfo held ♠AJx
♥Q10x
♦AKxx ♣AJx
vulnerable & LHO opened 1♣
& his RHO bid 3♣ alerted as a limit raise. The opponents have told
you that partner has absolutely nothing. 40 HCP –13 –19 –8 = zero for partner. You pass , opener passes & they play 3♣ down one as
declarer did not guess the club site correctly. If you take a bid , you are in the -800 range since partner held ♠xxxxx ♥xxx ♦xxxx ♦x which was exactly as
expected on the auction.
My
partner nv vrs nv held ♠Kx ♥Axxxx ♦Kxxx ♣Ax with RHO opening 1♣.
He overcalled 1♥ & the opponents bid 2♥ showing limit raise or better which partner doubled
for a lead. Their Q bid means there is
a high probability that they own this auction
with all the remaining HCP’s as in
Tom’s auction above. The HCP’s should be 40 HCP –13 –14 –11 = 2
for the ♥Q for partner. You do not compete in an auction that
the opponents have announced that they own.
Now RHO bids 2♠ which tells our side that they own the auction & a
game force is on their way. Do you ever bid 3♦ nv
vrs nv ? You are not competing
or pushing them up as they have
announced they are going to game
anyway. By bidding, you can be exposing
yourself to a horrible set or just
as bad , allow them to play the hand better in an auction where they are going
to bid game. If you do bid 3♦ in their auction , partner is going to read you for a 6-5 or similar distribution as why are you sticking your neck out in their auction with equal vulnerability ? On
this hand 3♦X goes for 500 on best defense & partner showed up
with the ♦Q , a card she could not possibly hold on the auction. You LHO
could easily hold ♦AQJ10 & partner’s double does not mean you have a safe resting spot
in hearts at the 3 level. By
bidding in the opponents auction, you are just giving them options or information
in which they are not entitled.
Partner also is mislead when the
auction progresses.
Thinking Bridge from the top down, means that there
are 3 types of Bridge auctions.
Those auctions that you own , so forcing pass theory
is applicable. Those auctions which the opponents
own ,
so old fashioned trump stack doubles are the order of the day. The last
possibility is where nobody really
owns the auction so you compete for the contract. In these types of auctions many
experts prefer competitive doubles or as we call it , D.S.I.P. double theory. The above is an
excellent way of thinking Bridge bidding.