Saturday,
November 11, 2006 7:00 AM
Hand Evaluation - Forcing Pass ( Recognition )
PITBULLS:
Forcing pass recognition is a huge
part of partnership
Bridge. You look for the clues
that deem that our side owns
the auction. Interpreting
the bidding properly determines whether your side has “turned on”
forcing passes. Looking at Bridge from this “ownership”
perspective there are three types of auctions. Those auctions that you own , those owned by the opponents & those auctions
nobody does. The latter auctions define competing in Bridge. Ownership is a hand evaluation concept that needs to be understood.
A Tormentee
held ♠KQ ♥Q1098x ♦AQxx ♣Ax , partner opens 1♥ & they
overcall 2♣. You do not waste any time & jump to 4NT. Partner shows
two key cards but RHO surprises you by backing in 6♣. You have enough
controls to bid 6♥ , but you can bid 6♥ in a different way. Since you own the auction ,
partner interprets your pass as
having enough for 6 , but leaving the final decision up to you. Partner doubles
& they go for 800 & your slam fails. When the diamond finesse is on side , you would have made +980 but they go for 1100 so a
pass is win , win. The Tormentee did not invite partner to the party
& unilaterally bid 6♥ for –50 as she did not recognize
the forcing pass situation. This is an equal vulnerability scenario where the opponents must be extra careful with
their sacrificing.
A rare form of “pass & pull”
came up recently with my partner & myself
recently. The opponents were not vulnerable , we were.
LHO opened a weak 2♠ bid , my partner overcalled 3♥ & I held ♠xx ♥Kx ♦KJxxxx ♣xxx & raised to game . This was passed around to the pass out seat but
they decided to take the nv sacrifice. This action by the opponents alone turns on forcing passes but the vulnerability has already done that. You double to warn partner that the 5 level is somewhat
risky from your perspective , however , partner
ignores your warning & bids 5♥ anyway. What
does that mean ? This is a rare form of
the “pass & pull” part of forcing pass theory. Since he passed originally , by bidding at the 5 level he is telling the
table that 5♥ is virtually a lock with his hand. I could even bid 6♥ , when I had
suitable cards.
Change my hand to ♠xx ♥Kxx ♦KJxxxx ♣Kx , I would have made the forcing pass.
You have two spades people would say . At the 5 level yes , I
would double with my 2 spades to warn partner we are off two fast losers but not at the 4 level. I would pass saying I have good cards with nothing wasted in spades. I would prefer offensive
action from my perspective. With the help of forcing pass theory & the same
hand he held , partner would have bid 6♥ which makes
with any lead. Forcing pass theory lets the opponents help you with your
auctions rather than just being a nuisance by intruding into your auction. With
modern bidding & bidders , forcing pass theory gets elevated in importance.
Forcing pass theory determines D.S.I.P. competitive double theory.
For all auctions that forcing pass theory does not
apply ,
D.S.I.P. theory does. Playing
D.S.I.P. competitive double theory , you must know
forcing pass theory inside & out
including what auctions trigger forcing pass theory. This is a bidding skill that
does not have to just in the realm of Bridge experts. Forcing pass theory is a
tool to ward off pesky
opponents. Using the opponents as stepping stones when they are out to destroy your auctions is quite satisfying J.