Thursday, April 20, 2017

A Helpful Preempt

Usually when the opponents preempt in our auction, it just makes things more difficult for us. But not always...
East Deals
N-S Vul
N
WE
S
A
A 10 6 4
Q 10 4 3 2
9 7 2

WestNorthEastYou
PassPass
Pass1 3 3 
4 4 Pass?

Your call. But first, a short quiz:

  1. Assuming that East has not made a gross mistake, why didn't he bid 3  right away?
    There must be some defect in the East hand that precluded a first-seat preempt. A side four-card major, perhaps? A borderline hand, unwilling to preempt against his partner? Perhaps only a six-card club suit?
  2. How many diamond losers do we have?
    Probably none. It's hard to imagine partner bidding 4  without at least  AK-fifth.
  3. How many spade losers do we have?
    None. (Hey, some questions do have easy answers.)
  4. How many club losers do we have? Why?
    At most, one. East presumably has six or seven clubs for his 3  bid. West raised clubs to the four level; it sounds like West has three clubs, doesn't it? You have three clubs. That doesn't leave many clubs in partner's hand.
  5. How many points does partner have?
    Hah, trick question! This auction is not about points; points don't take tricks.
Okay, back to the auction. ... - 4 - Pass to you. Your call?

ANSWER: Bid 4 , committing to at least 5  and showing the  A to tell partner that we may well have a slam here. Partner should realize that you must have more than just the  A and a diamond fit; you're a favorite to have a black ace as well. If partner has a decent hand for this auction -- a club void, and two kings and a queen in the majors -- 7  will be laydown!

SECOND CHOICE: Just blast away into 6 . Bidding only 5  won't suggest to partner that you have both major suit aces.

THE PRINCIPLE: When the opponents give you some information, use it. The club preempt and raise, annoying though they were, told you that partner has at least second round control of clubs. The two of you have diamonds locked up. You have spades locked up, and first round control of hearts. Slams are about controls.

East Deals
N-S Vul
K Q 8 5
7 3
A K J 8 7 5
A
J 10 7 6 4 3 2
K 9 2
6 5 4
N
WE
S
9
Q J 8 5
9 6
K Q J 10 8 3
A
A 10 6 4
Q 10 4 3 2
9 7 2

BONUS MINUTE: South's hand is a classic "ins-and-outs" pattern: queens (and jacks) on the inside and aces on the outside. This is the perfect arrangement. Queens and jacks are over-valued in the 4-3-2-1 point count, but when they are in your trump suit they are certain to be useful. Aces are under-valued and always useful; aces in outside suits particularly so. When evaluating a hand, upgrade it if the soft honors are in trump and the hard honors in the side suits. If things are reversed and the soft honors are in the side suits, downgrade accordingly.

-- Ray
Better Bridge in 5 Minutes. Guaranteed! (or the next one is free)

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Time For: Jordan 2NT

Time For: Introducing bidding conventions that may not be familiar to local players, but are nearly universal in common usage such as the ACBL Standard American Yellow Card or ACBL Bridge Bulletin Standard. Whether or not you adopt the convention (I suggest that you do!), at the very least you should know enough about it to understand the opponents' usage.

After we open the bidding with one of a suit and our opponent makes a takeout double, it's important to raise aggressively with weak hands (and at least a 4-card fit) so that the fourth hand can't respond easily at the cheapest level. With a fit for opener's suit and a better hand, then, responder must therefore do something else to show a good hand. Using Jordan 2NT, a 2NT response shows a hand with a fit for opener's suit and at least invitational values: a "limit raise or better." Opener must bid again, guaranteeing that responder will have a chance for a rebid if she holds a strong hand.

For example, in an auction that starts 1  - (Double) - ?,

  • 2  shows three spades and no more than 9 HCP
  • 3  shows four spades and no more than 9 HCP
  • 2 NT shows a spade fit and at least 10 HCP
  • Redouble shows at least 10 HCP and denies a spade fit.

Since a minor-suit opening might only have four (or even three) cards, adjust the suit-length requirements as needed. After a minor-suit opening, responder can show a four-card major at the one-level but might choose to conceal a weak four-card major in favor of a preemptive minor suit raise.

The 2 NT call must be Alerted per ACBL regulations; if asked, the proper explanation is "artificial, showing a limit raise or better". Your convention card should be marked like this:

Okay, time for some example hands...
Partner opens 1  and your right-hand opponent doubles. Now what?

K 8 7 9 8 5 2 Q J 6 3 10 8
Bid 2 , showing three-card spade support and a minimum hand

K Q 7 2 9 5 J 9 6 3 10 8 2
Bid 3 , showing four-card support and a minimum hand

K Q 7 A 8 5 2 Q 9 6 3 10 8
Bid 2 NT, showing a limit raise or more in spades

K Q 10 7 A 2 K Q 9 6 3 10 8
Bid 2 NT, showing a limit raise or more in spades (in this case, more)

7 2 A J 2 Q 9 3 K Q 10 8 7
Redouble, showing at least 10 points and denying a spade fit

Opener's Rebids: 
  • If partner raises your suit directly, bid your hand as appropriate. New suits are forcing for one round, and have the same meaning as in an uncontested auction.
  • Thou shalt not Pass a 2NT response. Bid as if partner made a limit raise in your suit. With a minimum opener, simply rebid three of your suit. With extra values, any new suit rebid is game-forcing and has the same meaning as if you bid a new suit after a limit raise. Depending on your partnership agreements, that might be a natural suit or some sort of slam-try (help-suit or short-suit) or a control cue-bid. Simply bidding game in your suit indicates some extra values but no slam interest. Bidding 3 NT suggests a final contract and promises appropriate extra values; beware that responder has not shown a balanced hand.

Responder's Rebids
  • If you raised to two or three, you've already bid your hand; don't bid again unless forced.
  • If your 2 NT bid was a minimum limit raise, you have limited your hand; don't bid again unless forced. If opener bids a new suit, jumping to game in your suit ("fast arrival") shows the limited hand.
  • If your 2 NT bid included game-forcing values, you'll need to pick up the reins accordingly. Partner will assume that you have only a limit raise until you show her otherwise. If partner bids a new suit, bidding your suit below game shows extra values ("slow arrival").
BONUS MOMENTS 
  1. If you normally play 2NT as a game-forcing raise of a major suit (Jacoby 2NT), opener can use the same rebid structure provided that opener has extra values. With a minimum opening hand, just rebid three of the major. (Note: Don't play it this way without prior agreement, or a disaster may well ensue!)
  2. If you play Bergen Raises after a major-suit opening, that same response structure works well after a double; 2NT can be used as the game-forcing raise.
Fun Fact: Alan Truscott is credited with inventing this convention. Particularly in the eastern United States, many players refer to it as "Truscott 2NT". The name Jordan comes from Robert Jordan who popularized the convention in the 1960s. In Europe it is commonly known as "Dormer 2NT" after Albert Dormer who popularized it on that side of the Atlantic.

-- Ray
Better Bridge in 5 Minutes. Guaranteed! (or the next one is free)

Saturday, April 15, 2017

How Deep Is It?




6 5 3
J 5 4 3
6 5 4
Q J 5
K Q J
A 10 9 7 6
8
10 9 7 4
N
WE
S

You are West. After two passes, South opens 1 NT and everyone passes. The  K is an easy choice for the opening lead; partner plays the  8, declarer the  2. A spade continuation seems obvious. Which spade?

Let's look at the world through partner's eyes...



6 5 3
J 5 4 3
6 5 4
Q J 5
N
WE
S
A 10 8 7 4
2
Q 10 9 3
K 8 6

PARTNER: Wow, the  K lead was almost too much to hope for! But we have to make sure that we don't block the suit. Declarer has at least two spades for her notrump opening. Partner wouldn't lead a singleton king, so declarer started with either two or three spades. So there are only three possibilities here:
  • If partner had  KQx and declarer  Jx, partner will lead the  Q. If I duck, partner will lead spades one more time. If I overtake the queen, the jack falls. Either way, my spades are good.
  • If partner had  KQJ and declarer  xx, I have to wait for the third round of spades so the suit won't be blocked.
  • If partner had  KQ and declarer  Jxx, I have to overtake the  Q and lead another spade to knock out the  J while I still have a potential entry to cash the rest of my spades.
Okay, back to you. Which spade?

ANSWER: Lead the  J at trick two. Partner can work it out from there. If you lead the queen, partner will overtake (in case you started with the doubleton) and the suit will be blocked.

THE PRINCIPLE: When leading from an honor sequence, start with the top card in the sequence. But when you continue leading the suit, lead the lowest card so that partner will know how deep the sequence goes. If you recall the mnemonic "Follow The Leader" (lead from the top, follow from the bottom) think of this as "following" low to your original lead.

BONUS MINUTE: Suppose West leads the  Q at trick two. You are East, and correctly overtake the queen with the ace; alas, the jack doesn't fall. Which spade do you play at trick 3 to drive out the  J? Lead a low spade, as suit preference for the lower ranking suit (clubs). Alas, it doesn't matter on this hand, but some other time it will.



6 5 3
J 5 4 3
6 5 4
Q J 5
K Q J
A 10 9 7 6
8
10 9 7 4
N
WE
S
A 10 8 7 4
2
Q 10 9 3
K 8 6
9 2
K Q 8
A K J 7 2
A 3 2

-- Ray
Better Bridge in 5 Minutes  Guaranteed! (or the next one is free)