Saturday, April 23, 2005 6:04 PM
Hand Evaluation - Opening Bids ( Defense )
PITBULLS:
This hand came up which drew Tom Gandolfos ire when discussing the merits of whether the
hand qualified for an opening bid ♠Qxxxxxx ♥x ♦QJx ♣Ax . The people at the table contended that this hand was an opening
bid of 1♠ . Tom & I disagree very strongly that this is anything near an
opening bid. Why , because it is a semi-psyche that
erodes partnership discipline due to its lack of defense.
An opening bid by definition shows defense. If you open 1♠ on this hand & 1♠ on a
real opener how is partner to
know the difference ? It just like defining a word in the English language to
mean something , then use the word to mean something else in another conversation. Instant confusion & ambiguity . An opening bid is a control showing bid via
quick tricks for defense. Why ? because
quick tricks
must have a control ( Ace or King ) associated with it. Kx
, Ax , KQx , AK , AQ all have a
control combination. This is why ♠QJx ♥QJxx ♦QJx ♣QJx is not an opening
bid despite having 12 HCP’s. HCP’s are not the sole criteria
for an opening bid. Playing the hand & offense is not the sole criteria for
an opening bid. Keep the same HCP’s for the hand above but arrange them in quick trick combinations & you
do have a 9 HCP opening bid.. This transformation was due to controls &
suit length ♠KQxxxxx ♥x ♦xxx ♣Ax .
You are vul & hold ♠Kx ♥J10x ♦xxx ♣AK109x
so is this an opening bid with your 11 HCP ? Of course it is , as
you have a 5 card suit with 2 ½ quick tricks. Give yourself one more HCP with the same distribution ♠Kx ♥J10x ♦KQx ♣QJxxx is this an opener ? Of course not , it pales in comparison
with the 11 HCP hand & is almost useless if partner doubles a contract or
you have to play the hand. You may only contribute one trick
to the defense. If I doubled the opponents into game with my 5 defensive tricks & they made it because you opened
that collection , find another partner. To where do
you pull the penalty double with this hand ? You are
between a rock & a hard place . You go for –800 if
you pull or they make the doubled contract if you do not. To make matters worse , both the above
hands are described with a 1NT rebid. How is partner to field the difference ? Make them guess indeed L
When Bridge was
first invented , it was thought that 2 ½ defensive tricks was a basic requirement for an opening bid. This
requirement is etched into standard bidding & passed the test of time. This concept
originated in the Culbertson system but was carried over when Goren popularized
HCP’s. Game tries , slam tries , penalty doubles &
all situations where judgment is required in competitive auctions rely on this simple basic requirement for an opening bid. You may not consciously know that this is ingrained
into your Bridge judgment , but believe me, it is
there. If partner does not have the required controls for an opening bid
this is another variable that has to be considered in Bridge judgment
. Is partner opening with only 1 control ( hand
above ) ? This lack of discipline throws the partnership off in penalty double situations
, game tries , slam tries & overall Bridge judgment. You reduce the effectiveness of bidding as a
tool to make the correct decision in the game of Bridge .
Simple as that. It has the same effect on a
partnership as a blatant psyche
does. Trust gets eroded so partnership discipline
evaporates. 4NT Blackwood is a control
asking bid . When you try this bid , you assume partner has a minimum of two for her opening bid. If not ,
there will be a lot of aborted slam tries going down at the 5 level ! Anarchy reigns supreme
.
The notion of defensive tricks as a requirement for an opening bid
is as old as the game of Bridge itself. It is not
an archaic idea as most present day Bridge
theorists still make it a basic requirement for an opening bid . In the 1940’s another requirement was added to the quick trick requirement for an
opening bid. This is the notion of HCP’s . In addition to the quick
tricks , 13 HCP’s was the stated norm for an opening
bid. Over the years this requirement was lowered if distribution was present . However, the idea of having defensive tricks never went away. Charles Goren who popularized
the new HCP notion always taught
that points only augment the quick trick requirement
for an opening bid. There is no Bridge
literature on the face of the earth that drums up the notion that
defensive tricks are no longer needed
for an opening bid. In recent years, there have been rules of 20 or 24 that if your HCP’s &
long suits add up to those numbers you have an opening bid. This is fine in
theory as long as you have your defensive tricks .
There is an article in this month’s Bridge bulletin saying that this rule does not have
merit if they do
not emphasize the quick trick requirement .
♠Axxxx ♥QJ10xx ♦QJ ♣x is not an opener but ♠AKxxx ♥K109xx ♦xx ♣x is even though they both have 10 HCP’s .
Openers are not just moving your beads
on an abacus so if they reach a certain number , it is
an opener. People who do that just do not understand the costs to the partnership by doing so. They are out to con the opponents & take partner with them . It is that simple. Bridge stupidity at its worse.
When you have a choice between opening or not, the
criteria of HCP’s is the last thing I look at.
I look for controls so if they are
present , I now
consider an opening bid. I now look to see if these controls are in quick trick combinations. Next criteria is patterns . If I have a flat hand , I need the HCP’s . If I have distribution with the
defensive tricks , I look at suit quality
or whether my meager HCP’s are located in the suits or not. A good suit with
defensive tricks is an opening bid no matter how low the
HCP’s. ♠Kxx ♥x ♦xxx ♣AK109xx is a club
opener . ♠KJxx ♥AJxx ♦Jx ♣Qxx is not an opening bid unless on the terrorist vulnerability. Why because you only have 1 ½ defensive tricks ! Your club suit cannot stand an opening lead &
you do not have an offensive distribution.
Yes you do have 12 HCP’s with 4-4 in the majors but so what ? I
would hazard a guess that 90 % of the club players would open this hand. I
would also say 90% of the club players are wrong !!
Change the hand
to the same HCP’s , same distribution but controls & I would open ♠Axxx ♥AKJx ♦xx ♣xxx
. ( 1♥ though but not 1♣)
There is a tactical advantage to opening non openers in club games , sectionals & even regionals.
Weak players have trouble getting to their correct spot because you are confusing them. Sometimes you make it
difficult for them to enter the auction.
However , like Osama etc partner can not trust your openers so partnership discipline is a thing of the
past. If opening non opening bids
was a criteria , Osama & Ray Grace would win every event they
played in. Instead it is boom
or bust with them as they are swinging with their opening bids.
Good players take advantage of these bad
openers .
Huge sets are frequent & they
assist greatly in playing hands
your way. You get free
information not received at the other tables. Since the
partnership do not trust each other , they must rely on the opponents
bidding to judge further competition. If you throw them
a curve ball , they can end up +200 for 3♠ making 5 !
In single handed bidding , who cares if you have an
opening bid as partner is not
invited to the party anyway ! However, in partnership
Bridge , a lack of an opening bid
is also considered a lack
of respect. Leave non openers to those players with that style or for the terrorist vulnerability. Guessing whether partner really has an
opener when she opened is too tough on me. Opening non openers by rationalizing that Bridge is a “bidders
game” or make them ( including partner ) guess is
downright drivel. My partner’s
& I bid very much thank you , but we bid a lot as
a passed hand also !! Partner does not get conned that way .
Cherish thy partner is a better religion
to buy into rather than Bridge terrorism.