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Sunday,
August-03-08
Hand Evaluation – Dbls ( Competing 4 Level )
PITBULLS:
In the trenches
of Bridge when you are competing for a partial contract
, the battlefield is normally at the one , two or three level. Competing to
the 4 level is rare as 10 tricks are just too high & there is a risk of
pushing them to game. D.S.I.P. competitive doubles are "level
dependent" as they are a competing tool. When the rank of
your suit means that you must escape to the 4 level in order to pull partner's competitive double , a red flag should appear. Partner's D.S.I.P.
doubles have turned into a co-operative penalty double at
that level. Yes , you can still pull the double , but
partner prefers you to pass unless you have an extraordinary distributional
hand that you have not shown on your previous bidding. This is of course , unless the context of the auction has
indicated that they own their suit.
These
competitive auctions normally appear at the 4 level when the opponents own the
bully suit , spades. They bid spades to the 3 level , so a
D.S.I.P. double becomes co-operative penalty. Since we have a fit with cards,
the 4 level will not be a disaster but partner really feels that 3♠X can not make. The ranks of
the suit sometimes force you to the 4 level.
Tom & I had an auction where our suit was the lowly club suit
so a D.S.I.P. double required that partner goes to the 4 level. I opened
1♦ on ♠AJ10x
♥KJx ♦KJxx ♣Jx & Tom bid
3♣ vul which is an
intermediate jump shift in our system. Stan Cabay
doubled & I did not XX to show a good hand .
Lisa bid 3♥ so around to
me. I could just compete to 4♣ ,
pass or double. However , they are at the 3 level , Tom shows a 9-11 HCP hand
so we outnumber them quite badly in HCP's &
I am reasonably short in Tom's club suit. I decide to make a co-operative
penalty double. Unfortunately , Tom has a
minimum ♠xx ♥Qx ♦Qxx ♣KQxxxx so
he has a tough decision. I would pass though since partner's double is more
penalty orientated when it pushes partner to the 4
level. 3♥X only goes
one down but with a bad club break , 4♣X goes for -500.
The context
of the auction helps determine the meaning of these co-operative doubles as
well as the level. In the auction above, one opponent forced the
other to bid . There is no indication from the auction
that they own their suit. When
the auction determines that they own their suit , the competitive double is
“cards” measured in quick tricks. Partner is more likely to want you
to bid but they could be just too high. Another indicator whether the
double was co-operative are we actually competing in the traditional spades vrs hearts
sense. This auction was not a traditional
competitive auction nor do we own the auction. We just outnumber the
opponents in HCP’s. The doubles are co-operative penalty rather than
just penalty. Pure trump stack doubles still do not exist , we just take our plus with our methods.
There are competitive auctions where the rank of suits would mean
that you would have to pull to the 5 level. This is where
D.S.I.P. & penalty doubles converge. They are still co-operative doubles
but co-operative penalty when made at the rarefied 4 level. You only bid
at the 5 level when you are taking out insurance against a disaster with your distributional
hand. Partner's double tends to penalty though so doing something
intelligent normally means pass. The playing field for competitive doubles are
the one , two three level. Co-operative penalty at the 4 level or when the double will
force us to the 4 level. Penalty doubles directly at the 5 level & when you own the auction. Ranks
of suits & the level are two very important Bridge hand
evaluation concepts.
D.S.I.P.
doubles at the one , two & three level deny
wasted values in their suit by definition. At the 4 level or when
forcing to the four level, you may have cards in their
suit or compensating quick tricks. It is difficult to play “pure” D.S.I.P. competitive
doubles at this high a level.