Saturday, June 23, 2007 7:32 AM
Hand Evaluation – Tactics ( The
Pass )
PITBULLS:
Some
people feel that being disciplined in Bridge means just using
the green card. This is false. Poor players with no hand evaluation skills or
Bridge judgment pass when they should be bidding & bid when they should be
passing. Do not pass just to “wait & see” . This
is poor strategy that allows your side to be pre-empted from the auction or
misleading partner. A pass is a legal call that gives information to partner.
Your pass means you do not have a T/O double or an overcall
or a pre-empt so partner will judge the auction
accordingly. A “trap pass” should mean severe duplication in their suit & not
just a hand lacking a perfect bid. You do not trap pass vul vrs nv , so manufacture some sort of bid to get in the auction
early. This is necessary so that the opponents can not
use tactics to prevent you from reaching your vulnerable game.
Garazzo says “do not enter a fight that you can not win”. When the opponents have announced the
majority of the HCP’s even though you have a decent hand ,
partner is going to be broke. Admit
that your side is beat so use the
green card. When the opponents have the
boss suit , it is sometimes best to pass so as not “push them into game” . Balancing is an
art form where you need to read the situation by bidding when it is right &
passing when it is right. Length in their suit ,
vulnerability , quality of suit , HCP’s ,
partners action & the state of the match determine when you use the
green card.
A T/O
double does not just mean that
you have the unbid suits. You must have defense also as partner is allowed to make
penalty doubles based on your bid. Passing first & coming in later should
have meanings based on your lack of action
initially. Most of the time it meant you have their suit
or are light in HCP’s for not entering the fray initially.
Opening leads are based on partner’s non action during the auction. Partner did
not take action even though she is marked with HCP’s in this auction so why ? You probably
should lead their suit
in these situations. Partner did not overcall
in the unbid major , so lead
the unbid minor. Partner
probably did not want to risk an overcall at the two level vulnerable. Partner did not double a Q bid or a KCB bid or a transfer bid should have a huge factor on your opening lead
decision.
Misfit auctions are
where experts use the green card wisely. When the hands do not fit well
it is analogous to entering a fight in which you cannot win. This is a good time for the
underbid & just pass. Do not rescue the opponents by bidding when
they are taking risks.
A pass sometimes gives the
opponents rope to hang themselves. Notice the vulnerability &
go for the vul set rather than your nv game. Pass the decision to
partner when there is a good chance they could get punished. Forcing pass &
D.S.I.P. theory was based on not getting in partners way if they are heading for trouble.
Average
players have an irrational
fear of passing good hands in order for partner to make the decision thereby they
rescue the opponents from disaster. Partner will not pass the auction out when
you own the auction.
When the opponents interfere in your 2/1 auction or 2♣ auction
, forcing pass theory automatically kicks in. The pass is the weapon of
choice in combating psyches . Let their
own partner expose the psyche
for you by passing initially. You now are allowing them the rope to hang
themselves when they have obviously distorted the auction. If you act initially , partner will not be privy to the information you
have. You know they psyched but she does not. Pass in tempo as not to give the
show away.
Leave
matchpoint bidding to matchpoints.
It is not a disaster in IMPS if they make +130. Pass rather than take the risk
of doubling them into game or you going for a substantial set. Take risks in
Bridge, but not silly risks. Pay attention to
vulnerability & if there is no danger
of you having game your way , let them buy the
contract. Partner does not always put down the ideal dummy for you. Overbidding
does mean you are not reaching
for the green card often enough.
Do not forget that partner’s pass could mean that she has absolutely
nothing L
Actually
passing can be a very single handed Bridge decision tantamount to “master
minding”. If you pass in many auctions where partners HCP range is quite substantial , you are not participating in partnership
Bridge. You should keep the bidding open with a preference or an invitational
bid. A good rule for minor slam tries is if you have a safe resting spot in 4NT , go for the slam try. Passing can
be a very single handed auction so is often
fatal. Get partner’s input into
the final action of the partnership – the pass.
In IMPS , getting to your vul game or
slam is of utmost importance. In matchpoints , missing games & slams are not a disaster. In IMPS recently , I overcalled a weak 2♦ opener vul vrs not , with 2♠.
Partner held ♠xx ♥KJxx ♦Qxx ♣KQx & passed ! This
is terribly single handed as I could have up to 18 HCPs for my vulnerable
overcall & a 2nd suit. ♠AKxxxx
♥xx ♦void ♣AJ10xx & we miss a vul 6♣ slam. ♠AKxxxx
♥Axxx ♦void ♣xxx so 6♥ is possible despite
my 11 HCP. Passing 11 HCP opposite a vul overcall is a matchpoint bid at best & master
minding the partnership at worse. Do not forget that a pass is
final with no recovery.