Monday, May 12, 2003
6:02 PM
Hand Evaluation - Psychological Doubles
PITBULLS:
Using
an article by Zia Mahood as a basis for this strategy
“You
love bridge, just like the rest of us addicts. But have you ever thought about
which part of the game excites you most? It could be a delight in fine bidding,
the indulgent pleasure of a well-played hand, the artistic beauty of a killing
defense, or perhaps a combination. They do all have an irresistible charm.
Actually,
for myself, there is a fourth, even greater attraction: the psychological game. I find it
fascinating. Surprisingly, although countless books have been published on
bidding and play, almost nothing has appeared on this subject.
Psychological bridge can come in many guises
but the satisfaction from a successful coup is always jumbo-sized. Just ask any
player who ever deflected the opponents from attacking his weakest suit by
playing it first. Or any adventurer on his way to slam who cue-bid a control he
didn’t have and successfully stopped the killing lead.
What
bliss, incomparable ecstasy that lingers on long after the event. The great
advantage of these plays, unlike improvements to card play technique which can
take years to perfect, is that they can be adopted instantly by any average
player. This is a psychological penalty
double, based not on the evidence of your cards but on ‘other’ factors: the timing, the opponents’ bidding or their
table action.
You can use the double whenever the following 5 situations
exist, and you have the slightest excuse. “
1. The impossible-sounding
auction
As West
you hold:
ª 976
© AQJ103
¨ 8
§ 10842
|
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
RHO |
You |
LHO |
Partner |
|
|
|
|
Pass |
|
1ª |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
|
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
Pass |
|
3ª |
Pass |
4ª |
Pass |
|
Pass |
DBLE |
|
|
2. You want your opponents
to run
This is
great for poker players. It starts
with a familiar auction where the opponents struggle into a contract where you
know they are about to get lucky
and make: DOUBLE. The fear of a large number will help remove them to a ‘safer’
resting place.
I was
playing with David Berkowitz, the American champion, in the Vanderbilt
tournament. He held:
ª J43
© K103
¨ J104
§ J1095
Sitting
East, with South the dealer, he heard the following auction:
|
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
Me |
|
David |
|
1§ |
1© |
2©* |
Dble |
|
2ª |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
|
3©** |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
|
4ª |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble^ |
|
5§ |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble^^ |
|
All Pass |
|
|
|
* Club
fit, forcing but denies 4 spades
**
Looking for 3NT
^ a complete bluff
^^ much
happier
David
could see that 4ª on the 4-3 fit would make with the
friendly trump break. He also knew that the opponents did not know this, so he
doubled. A bad break might mean losing control and conceding a large penalty, so South reasonably ran to the ‘safety’ of the known
club fit.
Brilliant
— yet all he needed to do was listen carefully to the auction and have the
courage to make a Panther Double. You don’t need to look as sleek as a panther
to bid like one.
3. Invitational auctions
This is
my personal favorite. Whenever a limited hand accepts an invitation, the
Panther should be ready to pounce at the slightest excuse. That excuse may be
as flimsy as the fact that the last bid was made after a lengthy hesitation,
suggesting an overbid, or at least a tight contract.
|
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
|
|
You
|
|
1NT |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
|
3NT* |
Pass |
Pass |
Double |
|
All pass |
|
|
|
*after
a pause
The
double, by increasing the stakes, places considerable pressure on the declarer
who will proceed to misplace the high cards. In addition, his mind, filled with
images of ghosts and bad breaks, will be unable to function clearly.
If the
sequence above is for the more adventurous, the more common limited auction
where the defender can foresee bad lies or breaks for declarer, is impossible
to resist. Now the prey is helpless; it almost feels unsporting to pounce.
Armed with your new toy you decide to sit in on
a high-stake rubber bridge game. Naturally you pick up our typical hand:
ª 6
© J982
¨ Q1063
§ KJ98
And
hear this auction:
|
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
|
|
You |
|
Pass |
Pass |
1§ |
Pass* |
|
1ª |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
|
3¨* |
Pass |
3NT |
Double^ |
|
4ª |
Double |
All Pass |
|
* the
boring collection becomes a little less boring when North bids clubs.
^ the
Panther Double: the auction is limited and
more, both suits break badly. It’s time to pounce, maybe they will
run.
This is
fun because the complete hand is:
E-W vul
South
Deals
ª A72
© A3
¨ J84
§
AQ1032
ª
Q1094 ª 6
©
Q7654 © J982
¨
A5 ¨ Q1063
§
74 § KJ98
ª KJ853
© K10
¨ K972
§ 65
Partner
leads the seven of clubs and declarer finesses, losing to the king. South wins
the heart return in hand to play the ace of spades and another spade. When you
show out he wins the king while you throw a diamond. He now tries the ace of clubs
and a club ruff and partner overruffs. West cashes the queen of spades and
exits with a heart to dummy’s ace. Declarer, desperate, and with no more
entries to dummy, tries a diamond to his king. West wins and South’s only other
trick is his last trump.
South
ends up making three spade tricks, two hearts and one club; down four and +800
for East-West. Perhaps declarer could have done better but most humans don’t
perform well under pressure.
Now be
honest. If you had picked up that insignificant looking East hand before
reading this article would you have allowed your 800 to slip by? Life has no
guarantees and I admit that sometimes the Panther Double can backfire. But you
don’t have to worry. If your partner screams after such a disaster, blame me.
4. The Psychic Double
I have played with
partners that have made psychic doubles of Blackwood responses to keep the
opponents out of bidding their makeable slam . Doubling the opponents to keep
them out of them slam is quite the coup if you have a resting place to go to if
they redouble . This normally happens when partner pre-empts and you have
length in her suit . The opponents have a fit and your 10 HCP in your suit is
wasted for defensive purposes . You have the advantage that you know this but
they do not . Doubling a game to keep them out of slam is a reasonable gamble .
Even if they redouble and they bid again it is very hard for then to get to
their grand slam when you have doubled them in game !
5. Leading declarer to
misplay the Trumps
This type of double requires an “ear to the bidding” .
The opponents are having a slow invitational auction and they are about to get
a horrible trump break . 1♠ 1NT
2♣ 3♠
4♠ ?
|
v |
J |
Q |
J |
|
o |
x |
J |
10 |
|
i |
x |
10 |
9 |
|
d |
x |
9 |
8 |
|
|
|
x |
|
The odd are that partner has 5 trump .
Delclarer does not know this and might start the trumps from the wrong hand .
This is an invitational sequence so why
not play with declarers mind and double ? If partner doubles with her 5
trump it might give the show away and
declarer will play the hand accordingly and might get lucky and make it .
I
made this double in an IMP match a while back and had Pitbull Lorna as a
kibitzer . Lorna started to laugh when she saw my double card so she had to leave
the table . When the smoke cleared , declarer went for +800 and could have made
it if he played my partner for 5 trumps !!