Sunday, February 22, 2004 8:31 AM
Hand Evaluation – Dbls
( Permission to Bid )
PITBULLS:
When you have bought into D.S.I.P.
competitive double theory , you know there is no such
thing as an ‘enforcer” type trump stack doubles in competitive
auctions. A failure to double does not mean that there is no
duplication of value so gives you the green light to bid. In fact , the
pass has just the opposite meaning
.
After partner has passed in a
competitive auction , you wish to bid again with a
decent defensive hand ask his permission
by doubling. When partner’s hand is suitable offensively, he will take the push otherwise the
partnership will go for a plus in the doubled contrac
with bad cards in their suitt.
Good players , using the law of total tricks , push their fit
& suits to the limit . Quite often you will be sitting with 10-11 HCP’s but
wondering what to do in a competitive auction. Trump stack penalty doubles were
invented for punishing bad bidders.
But what when you are playing
good teams where bad bidders do not exist ?
Even good players get bad trump breaks but that is rare so the frequency of
doubles that show “cards’ are far more frequent. Now it comes down to which double is more useful to you in
competition, trump stack or competitive ? In good competition ,
no contest.
You have to get rid of the old mind set that
penalty doubles in competition show trump
stacks . Also get rid of the notion that a pass encourages taking
another bid in a competitive auction because “partner did not double for
penalty” . This was the thinking (
green light ) around the time Bridge
was invented but does not apply against good competition in today’s game.
Some example auctions 1♦ - 1♠ - Dbl – 2♠
3♥ - 3♠
- ? ♠xx ♥Axxx ♦Kxx ♣QJxx
You want to bid 4♥ but if partner has an unsuitable hand.
you would rather defend. You double
, partner has ♠KQ10 ♥Qxxx ♦AJ10xx
♣x says no thanks I would rather defend. 3♠ x goes for 300 as does 4♥ x . Change partners hand to ♠xxx ♥KQJx ♦AQ10xx
♣x , he says O.K. let’s try 4♥ by pulling the double so that makes . 3♠ x is one down.
The advantage of this method over
the “trump stack” warning method
is that in old competitive auctions single handed decisions have to be made. When
responder thinks their side can make 4♥, he must make the decision for the
partnership but it could be very
wrong. The “permission to bid” double brings partners opinion into the decision making
process. The biggest advantage of this concept though is taking the ambiguity out of the penalty double in competition . Knowing
that the double always shows “cards” rather than a trump stack, gives your side a competitive advantage.
Change responders hand to ♠KQ10 ♥Kxxx ♦xx
♣Q10xx with the same auction , 3♠ is passed around to
partner. When he has an unsuitable hand for defense or bidding 4♥ , you will be
defending 3♠ undoubled. Not
the optimum result but better then taking a minus in 4♥. The system
fixed you. When partner wants to bid 4♥ , he doubles so that gets converted for the nice juicy plus. When
responder passed & opener has a trump stack double of 3♠, he must pass & take a plus. Doubling will most likely get partner to
pull to 4♥ not want you
want. D.S.I.P. competitive doubles
are sound in theory , as the
opponents will be playing contracts doubled only
when the doubler
has a good hand and
the other partner converts with a trump stack.
That’s one of the problems with trump stack doubles, as the weak opener
must reluctantly pass so with the hint on how
to play the hand , the contract
quite often makes or only a small penalty is extracted. Traditional
penalty doubles are done
“backwards” in my opinion. You double with the trump stack so the
other hand regardless of the nature of the
hand has to leave it in. Quite often a recipe for disaster as they
wrap up the double when not pulled. The D.S.I.P. conversion makes sure there are defensive values in
the other hand as well as the bad trump break in the converters hand. Taking out
insurance for defeating the contract , so
to speak.
D.S.I.P. competitive doubles are not
for weak match point field or weak rubber Bridge games.
Trump stack penalty doubles were invented
for these games. Opponents you bid badly so you are about to be punished. These competitive doubles assume good
competition with the IMP scoring scale. All world class players play some
variation of the D.S.I.P. competitive double in today’s game.
Quoting a recent Bridge World , Eric Rodwell said “we all play these doubles now”.