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(571) Spear

This Week in Bridge

(571) Spear

© AiB                                                  Robert S. Todd
Level:  10 of 10                                 
robert@advinbridge.com

 

 

General

When the auction begins 1m – 1NT (both bids by the opponents), it is rare that we want to compete in a minor suit.  Usually in these auctions the opponents have the minors, since Responder has denied a 4-card Major.  (Even if we have a 5+card minor suit, it could still be best to pass and defend 1NT.)  In these auctions, it is effective to play a system geared towards the Major suits where we are most likely to have a fit.  Spear is an artificial system that uses all the bids at the 2-level to show different Major suit hands.  This gives us more options for how to compete in the bidding. Let’s see how it works. 

 

 

Spear

In auctions that begin 1m – 1NT, we want to be able to compete in the bidding with shapely hands with a long Major suit as well as be able to show just a good hand with a long Major suit.  We also would like to be able to show hands with both Major suits.  Spear is a system for this auction that allows us to do all of this. 

 

Here is how Spear works after a minor opening by LHO and 1NT by RHO.

 

Opener                                                Responder         

1-minor                 P                             1NT                        __?

  • 2♣*        Both Major suits, at least 4-4

  • 2♦*        Good hand with one long Major, 5+card suit, possibly interested in game

  • 2♥           Natural and competitive, 5+card ♥ (usually less than opening values)

  • 2♠           Natural and competitive, 5+card ♠ (usually less than opening values)

  • X             Good hand, usually balanced, 12+ points

Note:  If we want to compete in a long suit, including a minor, we can jump to the 3-level.

 

 

Bids by Advancer After 2♣* Showing Both Majors

One of the advantages of playing Spear is that we can show a hand that wants to play offense and has both Majors. This can be useful with 4-4 in the Majors and good values, but more likely to be useful with more shape and fewer values.

 

Example 1 – Both Majors

Opener                Advancer             Responder          Interferer

1♣                          P                             1NT                        __? 

♠ KJ874
♥ QJ874
♦ 5
♣ 93

With this hand we bid 2♣* to show length in both Majors and ask partner to choose one.

 

Example 2 – Both Majors

But what about with only 5/4 in the Majors?

♠ Q9762
♥ KQ87
♦ 7         
♣ 873

With this hand we want to compete in the bidding but show both our suits with one bid. If partner has equal length in the Majors (often 3-3), then instead of guessing which Major to bid, they bid 2♦, asking us to choose.

 

Opener                Advancer             Responder          Interferer

1♣                          P                             1NT                        2♣*
P                             2♦*                        P                             2♠

 With longer ♠, we choose to play there.

 

 

Bids by Advancer After a Major is Shown  

Partner usually passes 2-Major but needs to know how to advance the bidding after our 2♦* bid.  Advancer uses Multi-2♦ Advances over our 2♦ interference.

 

Opener                Advancer             Responder          Interferer

1-minor                 P                             1NT                        2♦*
P                             __?

  • 2M         Pass or Correct

  • 2NT*     Multi-Ogust

    o   3♣*        Good hand with ♥, usually 14+ HCP

    o   3♦*        Good hand with ♠, usually 14+ HCP

    o   3♥*        Natural, minimum, usually about 11-13 HCP

    o   3♠*        Natural, minimum, usually about 11-13 HCP

  • 3M         Pass or Correct

  • 4♣          Transfer to Our Suit

  • 4♦           Bid Our Suit

  • 4M         To Play

 

Let’s see how we bid if the auction begins as follows:

Opener                Advancer             Responder          Interferer

1♦                           P                             1NT                        __?

Example 3

♠ K7
♥ KJ9743
♦ 765
♣ 42

We bid 2♥, competitive, with this hand.

 

Example 4

♠ K7
♥ KJ9743
♦ AJ6
♣ 42

We bid 2♦* to show a good hand with one Major.

 

Here are some other auctions where it is good to have some agreements.

 

Example 5

Opener                Advancer             Responder          Interferer

1♦                           P                             1NT                        2♦*
3♣                          __?

  • X             Penalty

  • 3♦           Game Try in partner’s suit

  • 3M         Pass or Correct

 

Example 6

Opener                Advancer             Responder          Interferer

1♦                           P                             1NT                        2♦*
3♦                           __?

  • X             Penalty

  • 3M         Pass or Correct

 

 

Conclusion

Spear is a powerful system for allowing us to compete in the bidding with a variety of different hands -- weak distributional hands and still powerful hands. This allows partner to try for game or know how much to further compete in the bidding.  Although this system applies to a specific auction, it gives you a great advantage in this common competitive bidding situation. When they avoid the Majors, we often have them, so we would like to have as many options as possible for showing these suits.

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(570) Cuebids of Many Kinds

(570) Cuebids of Many Kinds

The modern game continues to create interesting auctions and we need to make sure to discuss how to respond to new situations with partner. Some of the most interesting (and useful) competitive bids are when we use a suit that the opponents have bid – called a Cuebid.  There can be many different meanings for bidding the opponent’s suit.  A cuebid is a tool used in a variety of different ways based on the situation. We vary the meaning to describe the hand that is most logical and often most difficult to describe in another way. Let’s take a look at cuebids of the opponent’s suit in a variety of different auctions and make sure we are on the same page with partner about the meaning of these calls.

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(569) Rosenkrantz Redoubles

This Week in Bridge

(569) Rosenkrantz Redoubles

© AiB                                                      Robert S. Todd
Level:  9 of 10                                        
robert@advinbridge.com

 

 

General

When Left Hand Opponent (LHO) opens the bidding, partner makes an overcall, and Right Hand Opponent (RHO) makes a negative double, then Advancer is in the middle of a complex competitive auction.  Traditionally, a redouble in a competitive auction shows a strong hand (10+ points), but with everyone bidding it is not likely that Advancer is too focused on showing values.  Instead, we want to design our agreements to let us best describe the most common kinds of hands.  In this auction, Advancer having lots of values is not common.  Let’s see how using redouble as a conventional bid, called a Rosenkrantz Redouble, can be more effective than this traditional value-showing redouble.

 

 

Rosenkrantz Redoubles

When partner overcalls, they frequently will have holdings like:

  • AQxxx

  • Axxxx

  • KJxxx

  • Kxxxx

With holdings like these, partner will be worried about leading their suit.  If we have a top Honor (Ace or King) in their suit, then partner should lead their suit; but if we do not, then leading their suit could be costly.  In this case, it would be very helpful if Advancer had a way to show a top Honor in partner’s suit.  This is what a Rosenkranz Redouble accomplishes.  When Responder makes a negative double, then Advancer can use this special redouble to show either the Ace or King in partner’s suit.

 

Example 1

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♣                          1♠                           X                             XX*

This redouble (Rosenkrantz) shows either the ♠A or ♠K.  It could be holdings like

  • Singleton A or K

  • Doubleton A or K – Ax, Kx

  • Axx

  • Kxx

Note:  Some partnerships may agree that this redouble shows both a fit and a high honor (Ace or King), but this makes the redouble less frequently useful. 

 

This is a very useful agreement because when Advancer does not make a redouble, then Interferer is alerted to the fact that partner does not have a top Honor and that it may be dangerous to lead their suit.

 

Example 2

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♣                          1♠                           X                             P

This pass by Advancer implies they do not have the ♠A or ♠K and Interferer should be careful leading their suit.

 

When Advancer raises Interferer’s suit in these auctions then there is an inference that Advancer does not have the Ace or King.

 

Example 3

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♣                          1♠                           X                             2♠

Playing Rosenkrantz redoubles, this raise to 2♠ shows at least 3-card support and denies having either the ♠A or ♠K.

 

 

Opening Leads

Another way that the Rosenkrantz redouble can help a partnership is to get them a ruff early in the auction. 

 

Example 4

Imagine defending a 4♥ contract with this layout in the ♠ suit.

♠ Txx

♠ Axxxx                ♠ Kx

                ♠ QJx

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♣                          1♠                           X                             XX*
2♥                           P                             4♥                           All Pass

If this is the auction, then West knows it is safe to lead a low ♠ because they know that partner has the ♠K.  With a low ♠ lead, the defenders can take the first three tricks – ♠K, ♠A, and a ♠ ruff.

Note:  Some partnerships also choose to play Rosenkrantz doubles instead of snapdragon doubles in auctions where Responder bids a new suit – showing Ace or King in partner’s suit.

           

 

Conclusion

A Rosenkrantz redouble helps partner with an opening lead by showing a top honor with a redouble (or even more importantly denying one when a redouble is not made.)  This gives up a natural redouble (showing values), but this is not a very common bid by Advancer in this situation.  If you and partner like “practical gadgets” that help you communicate in difficult competitive auctions you may find this useful.  Discuss using this gadget with your regular partners.

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(568) Snapdragon Doubles

This Week in Bridge

(568) Snapdragon Doubles

© AiB                                                  Robert S. Todd
Level:  9 of 10                                    
robert@advinbridge.com

 

 

General

Bridge players keep finding more and more ways to use doubles, especially in low-level competitive auctions.  The traditional double by the Advancer is the responsive double.  This double applies when the opponents have bid and raised a suit and partner has taken some action in the middle (either a takeout double or a suit overcall).  But when Left Hand Opponent (LHO) opens the bidding with a suit, partner overcalls a second suit, and Responder bids a third suit, then a double by Advancer is not a responsive double.  It is a different kind of competitive double called a Snapdragon Double – a fancy name for another double that wants to compete in the bidding.   Let’s see exactly what this double shows.

 

 

Snapdragon Doubles

When LHO opens the bidding (showing values), partner makes an overcall, and Responder makes a freebid at the 2-level (showing 10+ points) then the opponents have most of the points.  The most we are going to do in this type of auction is compete in the bidding.  We are unlikely to be looking to bid game based on HCP, so the only way we might bid to a high level is if we have an extremely large fit.

 

Example 1

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♦                           1♠                           2♣                          __?

  • A bid of 2♥ would be natural and competitive – showing a 5+card ♥ suit.  (Although we may normally play a new suit forcing by Advancer, it does not make sense to play it as forcing when the opponents have shown most of the values.)

  • A double in this auction is played as a snapdragon double – showing both the fourth suit (in this case 5+card ♥) and tolerance for partner’s suit (3-card fit or at least honor doubleton, depending on our partnership agreement). 

 

Having the snapdragon double available to show the fourth suit and at least tolerance for partner’s suit means that when we bid the fourth suit, we are not interested in partner’s suit and have a poor holding in their suit.

 

Let’s look at the previous auction with some example hands for Advancer.

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♦                           1♠                           2♣                          __?

 

Example 2

♠ 7
♥ AJT843
♦ 865
♣ K72

We bid 2♥!  With this hand, we want to compete in the bidding but only in our 6-card ♥ suit.  This 2♥ bid denies interest in partner’s ♠ suit – showing at best two small cards in that suit.

 

Example 3

♠ K5
♥ AJT74
♦ 873
♣ 632

We double.  With this hand we have only a 5-card ♥ suit and King doubleton in partner’s ♠ suit, so we are not certain which suit would be best for our side to compete in.  Double shows a 5-card ♥ suit and tolerance for partner’s ♠ suit – leaving it up to partner to choose which is the best place to play at the 2-level or if it is a good idea to further compete in the auction.

 

With the negative inference that our bid of the fourth suit denies interest in partner’s suit, partner will usually pass our suit with a reasonable holding – only rebidding their own suit with a powerful holding in their suit and a poor holding in ours. 

 

The snapdragon double applies when Responder has bid at the 1-level as well.  This is true, even though Responder has not promised as many values with a 1-level response as they do with a new suit at the 2-level.  In this case, some partnerships may choose to treat a new suit as forcing, since it is possible for Advancer to have a better hand (this is a partnership agreement).

 

Example 4

Opener                Interferer            Responder          Advancer
1♣                          1♦                           1♠                           __?

  • A double (snapdragon double) shows a ♥ suit (usually at least 5+cards) and tolerance for partner’s ♦ suit – 3-cards or Honor doubleton. 

  • Bidding 2♥ shows a 5+card suit and denies interest in partner’s ♦ suit – at most two small ♦.

 

Note:  These bids can be useful whether our partnership plays this new suit as Non-Forcing Constructive or Forcing.

 

Conclusion

The snapdragon double is a useful agreement to have with your partner.  In auctions when partner has bid a suit and the opponents have bid two suits, we usually only have interest in playing in partner’s suit or the fourth suit.  By having a snapdragon double available to show interest in both of these suits, then bidding the fourth suit strongly implies interest in only playing there – helping partner avoid making a bad decision after our bid.  Discuss this double with partner and add it to your growing list of competitive bidding tools.

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(566) Improve Your Card Play: Passive Opening Leads in Depth

(566) Improve Your Card Play:  Passive Opening Leads in Depth

Active opening leads attempt to "go out and get" our tricks. Passive leads, on the other hand, attempt to just not give anything away or help Declarer. There are many different types of passive leads for many different situations. Here we take a look at several lead types and hands where a passive lead may or may not have the intended effect!

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(564) Improve Your Card Play: Establishing Length

(564) Improve Your Card Play: Establishing Length

We usually win tricks with little cards (other than in the trump suit) by setting up our long suits. To establish these little cards in our long suits into winners, we need to play the hand well.  This requires using our large cards in the best way possible to establish our little cards. That means we need to play our combinations as best as we can, manage our transportation, and have some good luck in the way the cards divide. Let’s see how we can properly manage our cards to take our tricks.

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(562) NT and Balancing Auctions: Other Balancing Actions

(562) NT and Balancing Auctions: Other Balancing Actions

When our left-hand opponent opens the bidding and the auction passes around to us, we have a big decision to make – should we get into this auction, or should we leave the opponents to play at the 1-level? We have a variety of bidding tools to help us compete in the bidding, but we need to use our judgment about when to compete in the bidding and when to keep quiet.  Here we look at some of the classic bidding situations where we have a difficult decision and then overview some of our bidding tools in these auctions.

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(561) NT and Balancing Auctions: Jump Overcalls in the Passout Seat

(561) NT and Balancing Auctions:  Jump Overcalls in the Passout Seat

One place that we do not need a jump bid to show a weak hand is in the passout (PO) seat, also known as the balancing seat.  In this seat with a weak hand, say 5-8 HCP, and a long suit, we would not bid; we would simply pass the hand out.  Bidding here with so few HCP may give the opponents a chance to reach a better partscore or game that they may not otherwise reach.  Since we will not bid in the PO seat with a weak hand and we could make a simple overcall with 9-10 HCP and a long suit, then a Jump Overcall in the PO seat is free to be used to describe a different type of hand that can otherwise be difficult to show. 

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(557) Competitive Auctions: I Want to Bid Doubles

(557) Competitive Auctions: I Want to Bid Doubles

There are certain auctions where we have made a bid that has “fully described our hand” and we leave the bidding up to partner.  In auctions like these we usually are not very sure of what partner has for their bid and we want to leave any further decisions up to them.  But sometimes we have more shape than partner expects or our instincts tell us that it is right to bid on.  When that is the case we do NOT want to just take over and bid again – we told partner we would not bid any more after our first bid.  In an auction like this we can use a double as a conventional bid saying “I want to bid more”.  This is called an I Want to bid Double and it applies in very specific situations.

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(556) Competitive Auctions: Anti-Lead Directing Doubles

(556) Competitive Auctions:  Anti-Lead Directing Doubles

Lead-directing doubles can be helpful in getting partner off to a good opening lead. These lead-directing doubles are common when the opponents make an artificial bid. When the opponents make a cuebid of our suit, a lead-directing double is also very common. Here we focus on this situation in detail to structure our agreements to allow us to communicate in the most effective way we can.

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(555) Competitive Auctions: Scrambling 2NT

(555) Competitive Auctions:  Scrambling 2NT

In competitive auctions where the opponents have found a fit, we compete aggressively – especially at matchpoints. We frequently use double (for takeout) with three-suited hands and sometimes with two-suited hands. To handle these situations, we want partner (Advancer) to have a tool to help us find our best fit. As usual, in competitive auctions our choice of convention will be 2NT. This gadget is called Scrambling 2NT.

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(554) Competitive Auctions: Good/Bad 2NT in Competition

(554) Competitive Auctions: Good/Bad 2NT in Competition

Good/Bad 2NT gives Opener two ways to compete to the 3-level – by bidding directly with a “Good Hand” or by bidding 2NT first with a “Bad Hand”. Using 2NT as a relay bid, instead of a natural call, allows for a more precise description of Opener’s hand. Let’s see how it works through examples.

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(553) Competitive Auctions: 4NT in Competition

(553) Competitive Auctions:  4NT in Competition

When the opponents stay out of our auctions, we tend to have clear agreements about the meaning of a 4NT bid – usually Quantitative in a NT auction and Keycard in a suit auction. But in a competitive auction we are more likely to use 4NT as a bid showing two places to play. Let’s look at some of these auctions so we know what partner is trying to do when they use 4NT in a competitive auction.

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(552) Competitive Auctions: More Bidding over 3-Level Preempts

(552) Competitive Auctions: More Bidding over 3-Level Preempts

When the opponents open the bidding with a 3-level preempt then much of the tension in our decision-making process comes around “Should we bid beyond 3NT?” This is especially true when the opponents open the bidding with a 3-Major preempt, because when we have one long minor suit then we likely want to play in 3NT or 5-minor. This allows us to use 4-minor in some interesting conventional ways, just as we do vs. a 2-level preempt.

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