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    Forcing Pass - In a competitive auction, a pass that allows partner 
    to choose the most profitable option between a rebid in agreed suit, 
    doubling opponents' for penalty, allowing partner to redouble a makeable 
    contract, showing a stronger hand than a simple 
    competitive overcall, providing partner a conventional response and the 
    like.   As a background, partnerships should decide on one 
    of these methods: 
      
        | METHOD 1 | METHOD 2 |  
        | 
        
        Bid shows a good offensive hand | 
        
        Bid shows good offensive hand |  
        | 
        
        Double shows good defensive hand | 
        
        Pass shows a fairly good offensive hand |  
        | 
        
        Pass implies neither of these hands | 
        
        Double implies neither of the above |  While many players embrace METHOD 1, some partnerships (notably 
    Mechkstroth-Rodwell) prefer METHOD 2. Fundamentally, we find partnership agreements fall in two camps:  Industrialists and the Scientists.  While Industrialist methods vary, a typical agreement might include:  After we open, responder bids 
    at the 2 level and opponents bid 3 Notrump or above, either partner’s pass 
    is forcing. Additionally, the Forcing Pass is the strongest action showing 
    slam interest and at least a second round control.  Grand Life Master Gene Simpson frequents the NABC playing circuit with 
    his “for hire” clients, always placing in the Top 50 annual Masterpoint 
    ranking. Gene enjoys successes as an Industrialist, generously sharing his 
    Forcing Pass approach here (contact Gene at 415-250-2488,
    
    gsimpsongene@yahoo.com):  
      
        | A. | 
        
        Forcing passes apply when your side bids a game or higher and the other 
        side sacrifices |  
        |   | 
        
        1. You bid a vulnerable game |  
        |   | 
        
        2. You bid a non vulnerable game voluntarily |  
        |   | 
        
        3. The opponents have preempted |  
        |  |  |  
        | B. | 
        
        There are five options at the 5 level: |  
        |  | 
        
        1. Cuebid is a slam try - strongest action |  
        |   | 
        
        2. Pass and pull partners double - also a slam try |  
        |   | 
        
        3. Bid 5 level - extra values but no slam interest |  
        |   | 
        
        4. Pass – offers partner to bid five with extra values |  
        |   | 
        
        5. Double - worst hand based on auction |  
        |   |   |  
        | 
        
        C. | 
        
        Cuebid with an outstanding hand, showing first round control and 
        interest in slam. |  
        |   |   |  
        | 
        D. | 
        
        “Pass and pull” is uncommon. Be aware when you pass, partner doubles, 
        you need to pass unless you have slam interest  |  On the side 
    of the Scientists, in the
    
    Okbridge “Spectator” Marc Smith featured a series of Forcing Pass 
    articles (6/01, 12/01, 1/02). Another Scientist, Eddie Kantar authored the 
    definitive 
    
    Forcing Pass book and wrote a series of articles for
    Bridge Today 
    (2/05, 3/05, 5/05)  Naturally, Scientists methods for Forcing Pass bids vary considerably, 
    possibly including:  Scientists 
    have more scenarios (and memory work) with less catch-all guidelines such as 
    a universal “whenever opponents bid above our 3 Spade call and our bids are 
    constructive, our subsequent pass is forcing.” Regardless of your approach, 
    consider Environmental Factors 
    – particularly vulnerability, freak distribution, and offensive/defensive 
    tricks.  Here are several common situations: 2C – (any) – P – (any);P
 When opener 
    has near-game values such as a strong 2 Club opener showing 22+ 
    points, many play a subsequent pass is a Forcing Bid; lacking a better bid, 
    responder can double to keep the auction alive. However, when opener begins 
    with a 2 Notrump bid showing 20-21 point, subsequent passes are not 
    forcing.
 1S – (P) – 2N – (3D)P
 Responder’s
    2 Notrump bid is game-forcing so opener's pass is forcing. Note – see
    Jacoby 2 Notrump to review 
    alternative methods after interference 
 1D – (1H) – 1S – (P);3D – (3H) – 3S – (4H);
 P
 Assuming you 
    recognize responder’s 3S rebid as establishing a game force (opener 
    jumps, responder rebids own suit), opener is making a Forcing Pass inviting 
    responder to double or bid 4S with great Spades.
 1D – (1S) – 2D – (2S);
 1H – (2D) – 2H – (3D);
 Here, opener 
    can make a forcing bid by cuebidding opponents’ suit or calling a new suit. 
    When opener (the stronger hand) bids a new suit at the 3 level, the call is 
    invitational. Jumping in a new suit at the 4 level subsequently establishes 
    a Forcing Pass if necessary. Opener’s jump to game has the same effect. 
    Note: some play this treatment only with adverse vulnerability based on the 
    risk-reward differential. At any rate, if opener takes another path, as 
    rebidding at the 3 level, belated opener passes are not forcing. Note: many 
    also play Maximal Doubles at the 3 
    level.  Yet rules like this one should not be thought of as iron-clad. Contrast 
    these bids:  W       
    N        E        
    S
 1H – (1S) – 2H – (2S);
 4H –   (P) –  P  – (4S);
 P
 
 1H – (2C) – 2H – (3C);
 4H -   (P)  –   P – (5C);
 P
 It is 
    unlikely South is “walking the dog” with extra 
    values on the above auctions. Apparently South is making a sacrifice bid so 
    opener’s pass is definitely a Forcing Bid in these auctions. However, South 
    may indeed be walking the dog on this auction: W       
    N       E       
    S
 1H – (P) – 2H – (2S);
 3D – (P) – 4H – (4S);
 P
 The responder 
    may be bidding game based on an anticipated double fit in the red suits 
    after opener's Help Suit Game Try. 
    Realizing this, opponent South may upgrade a two-suited black hand and 
    solely bid game. Thus, the meaning of opener’s pass will vary by partnership 
    agreement (again, some play forcing only with adverse vulnerability). As an 
    aside, when your side bids a lower suit rank as Hearts over their Spades, it 
    may not be wise to “advertise” a possible double fit – smart opponents 
    certainly enjoy such useful information.  In some 
    situations, the Scientists liberalize their conventional gadgets to replace 
    the meaning of the Forcing Pass or even the double. Consider this auction:   W       
    N       E       
    S
 --       --       
    (P) -  P
 (1D) - 1H - (2H) -  P
 (3C) - 4H -   (P)  - P
 (5D) -  ?
 Should a 
    double be purely for penalty here, or is it a cooperative (optional) double 
    asking partner to consider a 5H sacrifice with an offensive hand? 
    Scientists point out the 1H overcall shows defensive values, not 
    immediately making a preemptive jump to 4H. So a common treatment is 
    “DSI”, asking partner to Do Something Intelligent! That is, “Partner, with 
    defensive values of your own, let the double ride, otherwise think strongly 
    about supporting my suit.”  So we've seen 
    the Forcing Pass agreements can have many subtleties, particularly for the 
    Scientists. Regardless of your approach, be sure your partnerships have 
    clear agreements.  Finally, 
    here's what the
    
    Bridge World Standard says about the Forcing Pass:  
      
        | 1. | 
        
        If a two-club opening is overcalled, responder’s pass is forcing at 
        every level - responder’s double shows double-negative strength |  
        | 2. | 
        
        When a forcing bid is doubled and there is no contrary explicit system 
        agreement or logic from the auction, a pass is forcing and a redouble is 
        to play (suggests a contract) |  
        | 3. | 
        
        After a negative response to two clubs and an overcall, opener’s pass is 
        forcing  |  
        | 4. | 
        
        After 1any - (X) - XX - (bid); opener’s (or responder’s) pass is forcing 
        everywhere  |  
    Also see Forcing Bids and the book
         
        Forcing Pass 
        in Contract Bridge; Forcing Pass methods are also discussed in
    
    25 Ways to Compete in the Bidding, 
    Bridge 
    Conventions in Depth (alternative recommendation using Forcing Pass 
    to show a weaker hand). |