Thursday, June 12, 2003 8:24 PM

Hand Evaluation – Overcalls ( Negative Free Bids )

 

PITBULLS:

 

            Negative free bids for 2/1 in competition after an opening bid do not make much sense to me as written . The responder can have a good hand quite often so the negative double with forcing good hands just complicates matters. However , there is a place for negative free bids . After an overcall by partner & an intervening bid , a non forcing free bid would be very useful for lead directing or sacrifice purposes.

 

            Negative free bids complement fit showing jumps in competition after an overcall . If you do have your own suit & a fit with partner then jump in that suit . Otherwise your suit bid is a non forcing free bid .

 

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       1 & partner overcalls 2♣ , RHO bids 2. This is a negative free bid of 2. There is so much bidding that a rock 2 bid is very unlikely to exist . If by some chance you have one, you can make a snapdragon double showing the unbid suit & tolerance for partners suit. Later on,  bid spades to show your strength. There is so much bidding going around , I would rather play introducing a suit as a “negative free bid”  not even forcing one round. This is both lead directing , finding a sacrifice or making a nuisance of yourself all in one negative free bid . If you do not play negative free bids , you have to bid 3 spades with this hand. Splinter addicts cannot even do that.

 

  

 

 

 

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     This time 1♥-2-2-?   but this time you bid 3 as a fit showing jump,  if you play the bid after overcalls ( recommended ) . Normally   a new suit would imply a fit with partner & a one round force . With negative free bids it does not , so we use the fit showing jump. We do not play splinters in competition ,so a jump can be a weak jump shift or a fit showing jump. If you go the “negative free bid” route you can play fit showing jumps with overcalls. My partners &  I only play fit showing jumps as a passed hand but if we buy into “negative free bids” it opens the door for the bid after overcalls.

 

 

 

 

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    With the same auction as above , it would be nice to stick your nose in with a negative free bid of 2. If you have a “real” 2 bid which you want to be forcing one round you are forced to double ( cards )  as per negative free bid theory.

 

 

The concept of negative free bids appeals to me when there is lots of bidding going on.  . Getting in there with your suit without forcing values makes a lot of competitive sense. The contortions with negative doubles for the good hands make the bid not worth it though,  with 2/1 auctions  . Overcalls are a different matter though just due to the low frequency with partner having a positive free bid . Negative free bids now make sense. Negative free bids & D.S.I.P. doubles go together. If you would double with cards , you do not need bidding a suit as a one round force.