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Friday,
November 25, 2005 11:26 PM
Hand Evaluation – ELC ( Q Bids )
PITBULLS:
There are
some bids in Bridge that imply a single suited hand. An opener
with a jump rebid or a simple rebid , an overcall ,
an invitational jump after a T/O double & a pre-empt to name a few. A 6-4
is not a single suited hand. You open your 6 card suit
, bid your 4 card suit followed by rebidding your 6 card suit. Rebidding your 6 card suit
immediately gives partner the wrong impression . She thinks you hold a single
suited hand
!
Avoid making bids that show
single suited hands when you have two suits. This is especially so after
T/O doubles since you play equal level conversion you may be missing a
suit. The auction goes 1♠-X-P- ? , you
hold ♠xx ♥K ♦AJxx ♣KJ987x so what do you bid ?
If you had one less diamond , you have a 3♣ bid which
shows an invitational one suiter in clubs. OK , you have two suits so what would a Q bid mean ?
A Q bid opposite a T/O double just means that you have two or more suits at
the invitational level or a strong hand ( includes 2 suiters also) If you
have only one suit with your Q bid , it means that you are too strong to
jump to game or invite. The Q bid does not solely imply
the unbid major(s), it just means that you want to force
& you may have two suits with less than game going
values. Of course , these two suits could be the
majors but not necessarily . Two suiters
invitational or forcing is the default understanding
though for a Q bid opposite a T/O double.
The Q bid allows equal level
conversion to take place from the Q bidders side. You Q bid 2♠ with your 6-4 in the minors. Partner
is not going to bid her highest ranking suit (hearts) but her lowest
ranking suit. Partner held ♠Kx ♥AJ10x ♦KQ109x ♣10x so
will bid 3♦. You have a nice hand so either bid
4♦ or try for a 9 trick game by making a western
Q bid. If you make the wrong bid of 3♣ initially ,
partner will never convert to 3♦ as you
have shown a single suited invitational hand by your failure to Q bid . Bidding a
new suit after a single suited hand has been shown by jumping
, should be a Q bid !! If
I held ♠x ♥AJ10x ♦KQ10xx
♣AQx ,
I would bid 3♦ as a source of tricks for a club
contract/slam not because I am running from the club suit. If I
am running from the club suit , I pass 3♣. Even playing equal level conversion
, you do not convert to a new suit when partner has shown she only has one
long suit anyway. That is a recipe for disaster. If partner equal level converts after an invitational
jump , it
is forcing.
When they open a minor with
partner making a T/O double , you have an extra bid
available due the rank of the major suits. A jump to 2♠/♥
shows an invitational hand. A jump to game means you think you can make
it but it is not a slam try. What if you do have a slam try in one
major ? Most people would
trot out the ambiguous Q bid which gives the wrong impression of
your hand. Partner is going to assume two suits or more for your Q bid or
a strong one suited minor. I like playing a jump to 3♠/♥ as a
slam try in that major rather than invitational with length.
Leap to 4 with those pre-emptive/invitational hands . This jump sets the suit
immediately , so subsequent bids can be interpreted as
Q bids rather than trying to grope for a fit. The spade suit has special
status due to its rank. Even after a 1♥
opener with a T/O double you have 2♠ available for inviting
, so why not play 3♠ as a slam
try ? This means one less
ambiguous Q bid to worry about. This is not standard but makes
sense to me.
♠AQxx ♥A10xx ♦xxx ♣xx
& the auction goes 1♦-x-P-? This is a 2♦
Q bid which can show two suits with invitational values. The T.O doubler picks one of them so we will invite by raising the
suit. A Q bid is not forcing to game but the Q bidder must keep the bidding
open until a suit is raised or rebid.
Default understandings are very
important in Bridge. A jump in a suit after a T/O double shows a single
suited invitational hand so a Q bid should default to mean two
or more suits & also could just be invitational
. The Q bid can be a strong minor suited hand if clarified
later. The more times you adhere to this understanding
, the better off you will be.