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- GENERAL BIDDING PRINCIPLES
-
-
- The bidding principles described here are not a set of universally
- accepted ideas, but a documentation of the particular principles
- the author has adopted.
-
- 1) In general, a jump to game or slam over any sort of notrump bid
- is a sign-off, unless the jumper has:
-
- -- bid three suits:
-
- Opener Responder
- 1H 2C
- 2H 2S
- 2NT 4H - slam try
-
- -- previously made a bid with slam connotations:
-
- Opener Responder
- 1D 2S
- 2NT 4S is obviously not a sign-off!
-
- The following are not invitational auctions:
-
- Opener Responder Opener Responder Opener Responder
- 1H 1S 1S 2NT 2NT 5D/6D
- 1NT 4H/4S 4S/6S
-
- This principle of "fast arrival" applies only to notrump bidding
- sequences.
-
- (Jeff Rubens of the Bridge World magazine has pretty well de-
- molished the "fast arrival" concept in general.)
-
- 2) The principle of "fast arrival" does not apply in sequences that
- involve suit bidding. In such cases, a jump raise to game when a
- lesser raise would be forcing implies that the quality of the
- suit(s) previously bid by the jumper is quite good, but there is
- little outside strength. Also, the jumper's hand should be at least
- somewhat better than has been promised up to the time of the jump.
- If all partner needs for slam is good suit quality in the jumper's
- suit(s), he/she can go on to slam.
-
- Opener Responder
- 1H 2C
- 2S 4H
-
- Responder has good clubs and hearts, nothing much else: S-2 H-KJxx
- D-765 C-AKJ10x. Opener can bid slam with S-A1085 H-AQ976 D-A2 C-97,
- pass with S-AK108 H-AQ976 D-Q32 C-Q.
-
- Opener Responder
- 1H 1NT
- 2S 4H
-
- In this case 3H would not be forcing, so 4H does not imply anything
- about suit quality, just a maximum hand: S-1032 H-J84 D-A652 C-A63.
-
- Opener Responder
- 1C 1D
- 2C 2S
- 3S 5C
-
- A 4C bid at this point would be forcing, but the 5C bid is not a
- "suit quality" bid. Responder has a strong hand with slam interest,
- and jumps to 5C only to promise a singleton or void in hearts.
-
- Opener Responder
- 2NT 3C
- 3D 4H/4S - "fast arrival," weak
-
- Responder has 6-4 in the majors and no interest in slam. This is
- a notrump bidding sequence, so "fast arrival" applies.
-
- 3) The bidding of three suits, including a jump, promises a
- singleton or void in the fourth suit, but there is at least one
- exception: When the last bid is a raise of partner's suit, and
- partner has bid and rebid just one suit, the raise denies a single-
- ton or void:
-
- Opener Responder
- 1H 1S
- 1NT 3C
- 3H 4H
-
- The 4H bid denies a singleton or void in diamonds, with which a 4D
- call would be made instead. See the chapter NON-JUMP SPLINTERS in
- the book "Marvin's Conventions and Treatments."
-
- 4) When a notrump probe gets doubled, a redouble by the next hand
- does not show strength in the doubled suit--it asks that partner
- bid notrump:
-
- South West North East
- Pass Pass 1D Pass
- 2C Pass 3C Pass
- 3S Dbl Rdbl
-
- North has S-92 H-A43 D-AQ964 C-A54. He redoubles to indicate that
- he would have bid 3NT if there had been no double. South should
- play the hand, so that her spade strength (Kxx?) won't be led
- through on the opening lead. With the major suit holdings reversed,
- North would pass over the double, despite the ace of spades,
- because he lacks a heart stopper. This redouble must be alerted.
-
- 5) When an opponent redoubles a takeout double (or a double that
- is primarily for takeout) of a suit bid, and the suit is one that
- only that opponent has bid, a pass over the redouble is for
- penalties. The passer wants to defend against the redoubled
- contract:
-
- South West North East
- 1H 2C Pass Pass
- Dbl Rdbl Pass
-
- South West North East
- 1D Pass 1H Pass
- 2D Pass Pass Dbl
- Rdbl Pass
-
- South West North East
- 1S Pass Pass Dbl
- Rdbl Pass
-
- In all three sequences, the pass over the redouble indicates a
- willingness to defend against the redoubled contract.
-
- When the suit has been bid by both opponents, however, or the
- redouble is made by the opponent who did not bid the suit, a pass
- over a redouble is non-committal:
-
- South West North East
- 1S Pass 2S Pass
- Pass Dbl Rdbl Pass
-
- South West North East
- 1S Dbl Rdbl Pass
-
- In both sequences, East's pass does not show a willingness to
- defend against the redoubled bid. It merely says that she has
- nothing worth showing at this time.
-
- When the double is for business (or more optional than takeout),
- a pass over any redouble shows a willingness (or resignation) to
- defend:
-
- South West North East
- 1C Pass 1H 1S
- Dbl Rdbl Pass - willing to defend
-
- 6) Immediate redoubles are not "S. O. S." They usually show a very
- strong hand, and tell partner not to be intimidated by the double:
-
- South West North East
- 1D 2C Dbl Rdbl
-
- If North's double is for business, East's redouble says that he
- expects 2C to make and does not want West to run. If it is a
- negative double, however, the redouble only shows the club ace or
- king in a (possibly weak) hand that cannot raise. A pass by South
- at this point is non-committal if the double is negative, since the
- redouble is made by the opponent who did not bid the suit.
-
- South West North East
- 1C Pass Pass Dbl
- Rdbl
-
- South has a strong hand with good clubs; the redouble is not a
- rescue request, although it does encourage North to bid if he has
- anything worth showing.
-
- Reopening redoubles (after two passes) ask for a rescue, but only
- at low levels, and only if partner has not participated in the
- auction:
-
- South West North East
- 1C Dbl Pass Pass
- Rdbl
-
- South wants to be rescued from 1C redoubled.
-
- South West North East
- 1S 2C Pass Pass
- 4S Dbl Pass Pass
- Rdbl
-
- South is not asking to be rescued!
-
- There is one situation when a redouble is S. O. S. even though both
- partners have participated in the auction: A responder to a takeout
- double may ask to be rescued after a minimum forced response:
-
- South West North East
- 1S Dbl Pass 2C
- Dbl Pass Pass Rdbl
-
- East no doubt has made a "weakness response" in clubs and wants to
- be rescued. She might have S-72 H-7632 D-J873 C-J76. If 2C had been
- a free bid (e.g., over a redouble by North), then the redouble
- would be to play.
-
- 7) When partner uses an artificial bid (e.g., unusual notrump, cue
- bid) to ask for a choice between two suits, and you have equal
- length--choose the lower ranking suit. With a doubtful unusual
- notrump, holding longer clubs than diamonds, it is good to know
- that partner will prefer clubs with equal length. The corollary is
- that when partner bids two suits naturally, you usually prefer the
- first bid suit with equal length (but there are many exceptions).
- Another corollary is that with 5-4 or 6-5 suits you should try to
- bid both suits rather than show them in some conventional way, as
- you would want to do with 4-5 or 5-6.
-
- 8) When an opposing voluntary bid has been raised immediately to
- the two or three level, all doubles are negative, not business:
-
- South West North East
- 1S 1NT 2S Dbl
-
- South West North East
- 1C 1S 2C Dbl
-
- In both cases East's double is for takeout, asking West to take
- another bid.
-
- South West North East
- 1C 1H 1S 2H
- Dbl
-
- South has too much to pass, and doesn't know what to bid: S-32 H-98
- D-AQJ3 C-AKJ82. The double asks North to bid again.
-
- However:
- South West North East
- 1C Dbl Pass 1S
- 2C 2S Dbl - business (1S a forced bid)
-
- South West North East
- 1C 1S 2C Pass
- Pass 2S 3C Dbl - business
-
- North's raise to 3C was not "immediate." See the chapter ACTION
- DOUBLES in the book "Conventional Doubles."
-
- Another exception: When a takeout doubler of one major later
- doubles a raised bid in the other major, he is exposing a probable
- psych:
-
- South West North East
- 1H Dbl 1S Pass
- 2S Dbl - business double
-
- If the doubled opening had been in a minor, say 1C, the second
- double would be for takeout (e.g., a very strong 3-4-5-1 hand).
-
- 9) You can't double an overcall at the one or two level for
- business if the suit is bid on your left, unless partner has bid
- notrump:
-
- South West North East
- 1C Pass 1S 2D
- Pass Pass Dbl - for takeout (5-4-1-3?)
-
- A double of 2D by South would have been for business (suit bid on
- the right).
-
- South West North East
- 1NT 2S Pass Pass
- Dbl - for takeout (he bid the notrump)
-
- South West North East
- 1NT Pass Pass 2S
- Dbl - for business (direct double)
-
- South West North East
- 1NT Pass Pass 2D
- Pass Pass Dbl - business
-
- The last double is for business because North's partner has bid
- notrump.
-
- 10) Whenever your side has opened the bidding and an opponent
- doubles (for business) a completely artificial bid (i.e., a bid
- that implies absolutely nothing about that suit, which excludes
- splinter bids and cue bids), a redouble shows at least one stopper
- in that suit, a bid is non-committal, and a pass implies no
- stopper:
-
- South West North East
- 1NT Pass 2H Dbl
- Rdbl - heart stopper(s), doubleton spade
- 2S - three or four spades
- Pass - No heart stopper, spades may be good
-
- The 2H response is a transfer to spades. Note that the 2S bid
- says nothing about South's heart holding, although he probably
- has Kx or better. Otherwise he would pass to let North play
- spades (in case North has something like Kx). If South passes
- North can redouble to insist that South bid 2S. This redouble
- says nothing about hearts. A 2S bid by North, whether South has
- passed or redoubled, must be passed by South. To invite game in
- spades she must bid 3S (or 3H, to insist on the transfer).
-
- If partner has bid notrump strongly, the redouble is okay with
- only a potential stopper (e.g., Qx, Jxx). The assumption is that
- a person who has shown a good notrump hand probably has at least
- a little something in the doubled suit, making the "potential"
- as good as actual.
-
- The principle does not apply to Stayman 2C/3C or to 2D/3D re-
- sponses to Stayman after an opening notrump. Doubles of these
- bids require a different treatment. See the chapter WHEN THE
- OPPONENTS INTERVENE VS 1NT in the book "Notrump Bidding".
-
- The principle does not apply in these situations either:
-
- -- When a Blackwood or Gerber bid (or response) is doubled. DEPO,
- DOPI, etc., take precedence.
-
- -- Double of a Fourth Suit Artificial bid. See the chapter FOURTH
- SUIT ARTIFICIAL in the book "Marvin's Conventions and Treat-
- ments."
-
- -- Double of an artificial bid during Checkback Stayman sequences
- See the chapters CHECKBACK STAYMAN BY OPENER and CHECKBACK
- STAYMAN BY RESPONDER in the book "Marvin's Conventions and
- Treatments."
-
- 11) Whenever a 4NT bid would be a natural raise in notrump and
- spades have not been bid previously, a bid of 4S is usually an
- artificial notrump raise:
-
- -- If neither partner has bid a suit, 4S is merely a weaker raise
- than 4NT, which is therefore a highly invitational raise:
-
- Opener Responder
- 1NT/2NT/3NT 4S - mild interest in slam
- 4NT - strong interest in slam
-
- The 4S response to 1NT implies 15 HCP, while 4NT implies 16 HCP.
-
- -- If the 4S bidder has shown a suit previously, he implies that
- his suit is not strong:
-
- Opener Responder
- 1NT 2D - transfer to hearts
- 2H 4NT - notrump raise, good hearts
- 4S - notrump raise, weak hearts
- 3S - splinter, slam try
- 4C/4D - splinter bid
-
- The 4S notrump raise implies that responder's hearts need a good
- fit to be useful in a notrump slam. With a poor fit opener tends
- to sign off at 4NT, even with 18 HCP. Note that Gerber is not used
- immediately following a Jacoby transfer bid. If responder wanted
- to ask for aces, he could have used a Texas Transfer to 4H, after
- which 4NT is Roman Key Card Blackwood (or his first response could
- have been 4C, Gerber).
-
- Opener Responder
- 1H 2C
- 3NT 4S - notrump raise
-
- Responder's clubs need a good fit (e.g., two of the top four
- honors) to be useful for slam. Opener usually signs off with 4NT
- when lacking a good club fit. When a club fit is not important,
- responder bids 4NT to invite slam.
-
- The 4S artificial notrump raise is not used after a 2NT opening
- unless it is responder's first bid or follows a transfer to hearts:
-
- Opener Responder
- 2NT 4S - invitational notrump raise
- 4NT - stronger notrump raise
-
- Opener Responder
- 2NT 3C
- Any 4S - natural
-
- Opener Responder
- 2NT 3D
- 3H 4S - notrump raise, weakish hearts
-
- The 4S notrump raise is especially valuable after a 2NT or 3NT
- overcall, both of which (especially 3NT) are wide-range bids.
-
- The conventional raise does not apply when 4S is a Super Gerber
- bid. See the chapter SUPER GERBER in the book "Other Conventions
- and Treatments." It also does not apply when a 2NT responder rebids
- 4S after opener raises to 3NT:
-
- Opener Responder
- 1C 2NT
- 3NT 4S - Five spades, 19-20 HCP
-
- 12) When the opponents have bid a suit, a splinter bid in an unbid
- suit denies first or second round control of the opposing suit. A
- jump in the opposing suit is also a splinter bid, but implies
- nothing about the unbid suit(s).
-
- 13) When a splinter bidder follows with a 4NT bid on his very next
- turn to bid, that is Exclusion Blackwood. Partner does not show the
- ace of the splinter suit, because the 4NT bidder is void in that
- suit.
-
- 14) When competing at a high level, it is a stronger action to make
- a forcing pass and then pull partner's double than to bid im-
- mediately. With a strong hand you won't look unethical when you
- pull a double that partner has made after long thought. Another
- reason is that you may want to bid slam if partner bids, but stop
- at five if he doubles. Besides, why not bid right away with the
- weaker hand instead of letting partner agonize over a meaningless
- decision?
-
- Note that this policy does not apply to non-forcing passes. Pulling
- a double after a non-forcing pass is a weak action.
-
- If the double is pulled to a new suit, that is a cue bid:
-
- South West North East
- 1H Pass 2D 3S
- 4H 4S Pass Pass
- Dbl Pass 5C - cue bid, not a suit
-
- North's pull of the double after his forcing pass shows interest
- in slam. In order to bid clubs naturally, North would have to bid
- clubs immediately over 4S:
-
- South West North East
- 1H Pass 2D 3S
- 4H 4S 5C - natural, not a cue bid
-
- A player who doubles in the direct position instead of making a
- forcing pass is strongly suggesting that partner not go on. A
- reopening double is a little more optional.
-
- 15) Whenever first seat has opened with one of a suit, and third
- hand has bid a new suit, a bid by fourth hand of opener's suit is
- natural and non-forcing. An exception may occur when RHO bids a new
- suit over partner's 1NT overcall. See the chapter NOTRUMP OVERCALLS
- in the book "Defensive Bidding."
-
- 16) When is a pass forcing? At least in these cases:
-
- -- When either partner has previously made a bid that is forcing
- to game (but is not a game bid itself):
-
- South West North East
- 1S Pass 2NT 3H
- Pass - forcing
-
- South West North East
- 1H Pass 4H 4S
- Pass - not forcing
-
- -- When either partner has made a strong (not preemptive) raise to
- game:
-
- South West North East
- 1C Pass 1H 1S
- 4H 4S Pass - forcing
-
- -- When a bid has been made that is forcing to a limit situation.
-
- When is a pass not forcing? At least in these cases:
-
- -- Following a limit raise, when opener has not made a particularly
- strong rebid.
-
- -- When either partner has made a game bid that may be speculative
- or preemptive (i.e., the bid was not preceded by any strong call
- from either partner):
-
- South West North East
- 1H 1S 2H 3S
- 4H Pass Pass 4S
- Pass - not forcing
-
- -- When the passer has previously limited his hand (e.g., by a
- notrump bid):
-
- South West North East
- 1NT 2C 2S 4H
- Pass - not forcing
-
- -- A player who has shown nothing and who may have nothing cannot
- make a forcing pass and cannot be subjected to a forcing pass. A
- direct double by such a player suggests only "cards," not a
- particular desire that partner stop bidding, and a pass is neither
- forcing nor invitational:
-
- South West North East
- 1H 4C Pass Pass
- 4H 5C Pass - not forcing, weak
- Dbl - shows cards
-
- North's "cards" cannot be too impressive, in view of his pass to
- 4C, but his double is not a warning for partner to stop bidding.
-
- South West North East
- 1H 4S Pass Pass
- 5H Pass Pass 5S
- Pass - not forcing
-
- 17) When either partner has redoubled during an auction in which
- both have participated, a subsequent double by either partner is
- a business double.