Saturday, August 28, 2004 3:25 AM
Hand Evaluation – Misfits (
Dormer 2NT )
PITBULLS:
The Dormer 2NT complements the “redouble shows no fit”
treatment after a takeout double. The not fit
aspect of the XX prevents the opponents jamming you from describing
your hand after a redouble showing your 10 + HCP’S. A bid like a XX that just
describes HCP’s is very ambiguous. Having the bid
as further described as having no fit , reduces this ambiguity. 1♥-X-XX-3♠
P-P-? so
partner has no idea what’s going
on when you redoubled with
a fit. Conventional bids like Dormer announcing a fit were invented in order to tightly define
the XX as showing no fit with 10 +
HCP’s. In Bridge , it is best to announce your fit or misfit at the earliest opportunity. The Dormer 2NT
shows a limit raise or better but does it promise 4 trump ?
No , it does not ,
but it does show a hand that you prefer
to play in partner’s major. If the alternate contract might be 3NT or doubling the opponents
, I feel you should redouble
going in even with your 3 card fit.
I held this hand ♠QJxx ♥109x ♦Jxx ♣AKx , my partner opened 1♥ , RHO doubled. I redoubled so when the spade response got around to me
I bid 1NT . Partner bid 3NT with ♠xx ♥AKQxx ♦Q10x
♣QJx and 4♥ goes down one
but we made 3NT with a spade lead & continuation. Some people feel that
you must bid the Dormer 2NT when
you have 3 trump , so if you redouble & bid hearts
it shows two trump.
No , rules are made to be broken so the redouble
promises no fit is one of them . If partner redoubles
, supports your major, play him
for exactly 3 as he would have made an alternative bid with a different number
of trump. It is not a good idea to make a penalty
double when you hold 3 of
partners major. Yes, this is another rule that can be broken . You have a defensive
flat hand with 3 of partners major , I
think a redouble is a more descriptive bid then 2NT . ♠J109x ♥Kxx ♦Qx ♣AJ10x I feel a redouble after partner opens 1♥ is better than
a 2NT bid. If the opponents minor gets doubled , it
will not play very well . If they get too frisky in spades that will not play
well either. I think you must have a reason to show a limit raise hand or
better hand with 2NT
because we feel that the major game is most likely the best
contract.
Most people respond to the Dormer 2NT with Jacoby like responses. My partners & I play 3♣ as any minimum over 2NT as that bid shows a
limit raise or better . A rebid of the major shows a good hand with no
singletons. Its business as usual with the 2NT treatment over a double, as the 2NT is a
limit raise or better.
What about if partner bids 2NT over a double as a passed hand ? Tom
and I play 2NT as a passed hand as a Bergen raise
showing a 4 card raise with a 7-11 point range without a double. We prefer bidding 1NT
with the 3 card limit raise as when partner can not
bid over 1NT , we are not going anywhere. As a passed
hand, we can redouble to show the 3 card fit , so a 2NT bid would always show 4 trump with
the same range as when the opponents did not
double.
Ambiguity is the killer
of Bridge bidding . A XX can be just
another ambiguous bid in Bridge when you allow it to be. Having
the XX saying that you do not fit partner’s suit even if it is a minor ( playing 5 card majors) define the bid as totally punitive.
The purpose of the XX becomes solely
penalty orientated ( descriptive ) as it should be
because you can just make other forcing noises with a fit or a conventional bid
like Dormer. The XX implies a misfit auction so the real estate principle of location , location & location comes into effect . Where
are your HCP’s located ? In the suit that you opened
where partner has shown no fit is a very good
thing for defensive purposes. These points are wastage
on offense & great on defense. The XX announcing an immediate misfit is a clear & unambiguous bid. In Bridge
bidding , that is a good thing for decision making.
NT contracts play better when you have a mild fit with partners minor.
After a XX , if I do have a fit
with partner’s minor, I know that I detract from partners defensive values , so
I choose a NT bid. If I do not fit partner’s suit when we have the majority of HCP’s , I choose a double. This shows partner the difference
between those 10-12 HCP XX. One bid shows a mild fit ( NT
) & the other one does not ( DBL ) . This reasoning is the basis of all penalty doubles. Let opponents
play misfits , preferably doubled !
In order to preserve the unambiguous nature of a XX, some experts do
not XX with the 9-11 HCP balanced hands with a mild fit for partner. They pass
& make a belated double of the opponent’s
suit which shows a balanced hand
with a mild fit for partner. This allows the
XX to always show no fit &
takes those balanced hands out of the XX equation. This pass & double is in
effect a XX with a balanced hand & a mild minor/major fit. Partner might convert the double
or right side the NT or retreat to the fitting minor. Playing this
understanding has merit as you do not rescue the opponents by bidding NT when
you do not have the fit with partner. Some one level dbls
can go for a
number when they are in a 4-3 fit. with a trump lead.
You change the contract to 2NT & make it means they are going for -500 at
the one level or -800 at the two level. Here is an
article on the subject by Karen
Walker .