Tuesday,
July 25, 2006 10:36 PM
Hand Evaluation – Tactics ( Up the Line Bidding )
PITBULLS:
One of the worst concepts
in Bridge ( maybe next to 4th suit forcing
) is bidding up the line. I think
it was invented by a matchpoint player, who wanted to
ensure that their weak partners would always
get to a 4 of a major game. In matchpoints ,
major suit partials score better than NT partials so up the line bidding is a
pure matchpoint concept. In IMPS ,
I feel up the line bidding is a losing strategy. +420 rather than +400 is
meaningless in IMPS.
The worst fault of “up the line” bidding is that you hide your distribution
from partner. There are two main hand types
in Bridge – balanced or distributional. When you have a balanced hand , describe it to partner by rebidding 1NT or 2NT. This
unleashes the “power of the weak NT”. You make them guess
on opening lead , guess on discards so Meckwell type 3NT games are brought home. Balanced hands are more defensive, so play
worse than their distributional counterparts. When there is a 4-4 major fit to be found , let partner ( responder ) initiate the bidding. At least she will know first that a balanced hand awaits her. Describe your
balanced hand pattern to partner at the earliest opportunity.
There is an inference with natural bidding
provided by not playing up the
line bidding. You describe your real
distribution at the one level.
Now there is a thought !
You know by the one level that partner has 5 of her minor & 4 of a major rather than
3 of them & a flat hand. The excellent XYZ structure is based on this concept.
The most important aspect of not playing up the line bidding is ignoring 4-4 major fits
& playing the correct contract of 3NT
or a minor game/slam. There are many flat hands that 9 tricks are
the limit but 4 of the major plays exactly the same. The Spingold
, Vanderbilt & Bermuda Bowl write ups are filled with swing hands that getting to 3NT with a
4-4 major fit was the winning
bid. Sometimes even with a 5-4 major fit if you have soft values with a source
of tricks , 3NT is the
superior contract.
Bypassing
weak 4 card majors by responder is quite often the winning strategy
in IMPS . You have a balanced
hand with soft values so describe your hand to partner by bidding
some number of NT. In matchpoints this is a no-no , as
even a major suit Moysean will earn you lots of matchpoints. The longer I play this game
, the more I feel all bidding
should show distribution ( patterns ) first , other attributes later. Ignoring
your balanced hand by bidding a major
makes no Bridge sense to me. I feel you are concealing
your true hand from partner. You
are introducing needless ambiguity involving
the trick taking potential of your hand.
Balanced hands are a detriment in Bridge re
playability. Letting partner in on the secret at the earliest opportunity is the best strategy. This
is before partner makes a game try or a leap to game.
1♣-P-1♥-P
1♠ & partner is 4-3-3-3
with 4 spades & 3 clubs is terrible bidding & makes no sense to me. The hand may also
have soft values so needs to be right sided for NT contracts. Bid NT first
& ask questions re a 4 card major later. 2 way NMF does an
excellent job of that.
2 Way NMF is an excellent tool to replace up the line bidding. This 2 way NMF
is actually just XYZ with a 1NT bid being the 3rd
bid at the one level. 2 way NMF applies
after a 1♣-P-1♦ response also
1♣-P-1♦-P
1NT as the INT bidder may have a 4 card major or two four card majors for that matter.
Also 2 way NMF applies after
1♥-P-1♠-P
1NT.
Remember the purpose
of playing XYZ or
2 way NMF is to get rid of silly up
the line bidding. These conventions also have some nice built in
toys but describing a distributional
hand via a major bid at the one level
is the primary purpose of this approach. Having 2♣ as showing all invitational hands & 2♦ as all forcing to game
hands is an excellent concept.
This unleashes now idle jump preference & jump shifts as strong & natural for all
auctions where the bidding remains at the one
level for 3 bids..