Friday, March 02, 2007 12:48 AM
Hand Evaluation – Tactics ( Useful Space Principle )
PITBULLS:
Years ago , Jeff Reubens of the Bridge World wrote a series of articles on
what he called the useful space principle. What he meant was , design your
system so you do not waste bidding room. Use all the useful
bidding space that you can. The most obvious example of the useful space
principle is forcing 1♣ systems. Keeping the bidding low
allows all the space in the world to convey information.
He contended that Blackwood used up too much useful space
so Kickback & minor suit KCB were born. With the conserved
bidding space , specific kings , queen ask & suit
asks followed. He felt a Q bid to an overcall used up
too much space so new suits to an overcall became a one
round force. This allowed the Q bid to be defined as specifically a limit
raise or better in partner’s suit. Transfers ( Reubensohl) were used in competition after their
interference of a strong NT as transfers
conserved useful bidding space.
Expert players have taken his ideas further. The 3♣
multi purpose strong jump shift preserves useful bidding space. This is the “artificial
club” part of a natural system . The
bid prevents the horrible auction of
1♦-P-1♠-P
4♠
to show a strong hand. Also the horrible leap to your own major at the game level , as a strong hand. Bidding becomes a crap shoot at
the 5 level. 1♥-P-1NT-P 4♥ Look at all the useful
bidding space wasted when this jump showed a strong hand. Slam
exploration starts at the 5 level . Allow fast
arrival to show distribution or picture bids instead of strength measured
in HCP’s.
Goren methods contradict
“fast arrival” & the Useful Space Principle. Jumping to game to show strong
hands ( HCPs ) is silly bidding as you are pre-empting
your own partner. The 4 level or even the 5 level is a silly place to start
exploring for slam or even a better contract. When you play a strong NT in the
15-17 HCP range even with a 5 card major , the
invitational 2NT range is idle. The raise to 2NT can now take the place of
the Goren 3NT bid ( jump to game after a 1NT response
) . This allows room at the 3 level
to investigate alternative contracts. A leap to 3NT can be a “picture bid”
defined by the partnership.
Some experts have now switched to 2NT after a minor as
11+ to 15 as invitational or a game force. Again
, this is the useful space principle in action. Leaping to 3NT
with a game forcing hand pre-empts partner. Exploration for slam &
better contracts must start at the 4 level & going by 3NT is
dangerous. Better to describe your distributional hand below 3NT. More
care is needed when partner responds 1NT ( pretty
healthy) so do not pull 1NT when you are weak. Partner may have 10+ for
the 1NT bid & when you bid again invitational sequences follow.
I feel 2NT when it is bid in competition as natural
should be a one round force. Who plays a contract of 2NT
in competition anyway ? 1♦-2♣-2NT-P is a one round force & may be
unlimited. Why leap to 3NT with a good hand ?
Pre-empting partner to the 4 level & losing useful space leads to bad results.
2NT can still be invitational hands so opener rebidding her suit is an escape
hatch.
This is in effect the “new suit” 2NT ( godfather ) by responder also being used in competition. Why not ? This means a leap to 3NT in competition can mean very
soft values & no slam interest. 2NT as a place to play a hand
only makes sense in matchpoints when +120 beats 3 of
a minor +110. When you can make 2NT on the nose ,
surely 3 of a minor does just as well or better in IMPS. Bidding 2NT as a new
suit by responder has all the
advantages of opener patterning out & natural bidding to get to your best
spot. 2NT as a new suit,
preserves bidding space & is still another example of the useful
space principle.