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                Chapter 1 
                
                
                GETTING OFF ON THE RIGHT FOOT 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
  While 
                it is necessary to master your partnership’s conventions, it is 
                crucial to understand your partner’s style. 
                You need to know what to expect 
                from partner before you can make good bidding decisions. Keep in 
                mind that it is not necessary for you and partner to have 
                identical bidding styles. In fact, it is impossible. 
                In the 
                situations below, you must know what partner is likely to do. 
                With a close decision, does he: 
                Open light? (If 
                he relies on The Rule of 20, the answer is yes.) 
                Preempt 
                aggressively? 
                Overcall 
                aggressively? 
                Make light 
                takeout doubles? 
                Dramatically 
                change his style when vulnerable? 
                By the way: 
                It is essential to be consistent - “to thine own self be 
                true.” Whether you are a solid citizen or loose as a goose, stay 
                in character.  Dealing with a chameleon is just too tough. 
                Page 15 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                The Law of the Land 
                You are 
                always safe bidding to the level equal to your side’s number 
                of trumps.  This is known as The Law of Total Tricks. 
                Although 
                “always” is a word to be avoided in bridge, The LAW is more 
                accurate than any bridge player you (or I) know, and it even 
                transcends vulnerability. Applications of this essential 
                principle are endless 
                West   North   
                East     South 
                1 1  2  ??? 
                
                 K7643  7  85  98642 
                Bid 
                4 . Adding partner’s five spades to your five gives you a 
                10-card fit — so jump to the four (10-trick) level. Even if 4h 
                (doubled) goes down — not to worry — the opponents must have an 
                easy game or slam. 
                West   North   
                East     South 
                 —        
                —       Pass   1 
                2 2  3  ??? 
                
                 AQJ  876532  74  A2 
                Bid 3 . I have seen stronger suits, but our six trumps plus 
                partner’s three totals nine. Sometimes, bridge is an easy game. 
                Page 16 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                A Class Act 
                It is 
                hard to play like a champion, but easy to behave like one. 
                  A CHUMP                                   
                A CHAMP
 
                gives “free” 
                lessons                    
                does not preach 
                sides with 
                opponents                  
                sides with partner 
                berates partner                            
                treats partner with respect 
                dwells on bad 
                results                  
                moves on 
                makes partner 
                wish                    
                allows partner to enjoy 
                he were 
                elsewhere                      
                the game 
                is in his own 
                world                       
                knows that bridge is a partnership game 
                 thinks he 
                knows it all                  
                is willing to learn 
                insists on 
                playing                         
                only is open to partner’shis favorite 
                conventions              
                suggestions
 
                Page 17 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                No Reason to Stall 
                "He who knows, goes.” 
                If you know 
                what the final contract should be, bid it. 
                West   North   
                East     South 
                 —        
                —        —        
                1 
                
                Pass    2 Pass    ??? 
                
                 Q87432  Q3  —  AKQJ8 
                Bid 4h. 
                You have gorgeous clubs, but so what?    You want 
                to play in 4h, 
                period.
 
                West   North   
                East     South 
                Pass    2NT     
                Pass     3 (transfer) 
                Pass     3 Pass     
                ??? 
                
                 6  KQJ95  J9863  82 
                Bid 4 . 
                Because of your great hearts, you should insist on the 
                major-suit game. 
 
                West   North   
                East     South 
                —       
                Pass     1 Dbl 
                2 2  Pass      ??? 
                
                 53  K6  AKQJ74  A84 
                Bid 3NT. On 
                a heart lead, all you need from partner to score this up is the
                
                
                 A 
                or the  K. 
                That’s not too much to expect after his free 
                
                2  bid. 
                Page 17 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                Take a Hike 
                Taking a 
                walk between rounds is often the best remedy for your bridge 
                woes. 
                There are 
                times when you must get away from partner and/or your opponents. 
                You have probably just gotten a bad result. Don’t sit around 
                playing the martyr or glaring at partner. As soon as you get a 
                chance, just excuse yourself and leave. It does not matter where 
                you go — the restroom, outside, the water fountain and “in 
                circles” are all fine choices. 
                I discovered 
                this technique the hard way early in my professional career. I 
                was playing with a client who turned out to be rather obnoxious. 
                He was obviously not interested in learning and spent his time 
                lecturing me, and the opponents, on the error of our ways. 
                One day I 
                just couldn’t stand it any longer. As soon  as we finished 
                the round, I was “outta there.” I went outside for some air and 
                did not return until the next round was called. I can’t say that 
                I looked forward to returning to the “battle,” but at least I 
                had preserved my sanity. And, although the money was good, I put  
                a quick end to our arrangement. Life is just too short 
                By the 
                way: 
                
                Taking a walk to relieve a stressful situation has helped me in 
                many other situations. 
                Page 18 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                Some for Me, Some for You 
                Bid 
                aggressively when your partnership’s assets are evenly divided. 
                Proceed cautiously when they are one-sided 
                
                                            
                On hand 1), 
                the 26 HCP are divided 21-5 and dummy has exactly one entry. 
                Unless the 
                 Q 
                falls, you are limited to two club tricks. Even if East has the  K, 
                you can’t finesse twice. Dummy is “useless,” so you are playing 
                “one against two.” Down you go. 
                On hand 2), 
                the 26 HCP are split 13-13. What a difference! Communication 
                between the two hands is a breeze. Now that dummy has become an 
                active participant, the two of you are ready for battle. 
                Win the 
                
                 A, 
                unblock the  AK, 
                lead the  Q, 
                and relax. 
                Page 19 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                This Dummy is No dummy 
                When 
                dummy tables his cards, he should hold on to the suit that was 
                led and put it down last. 
                  
                  Why should 
                  he do that? To force declarer to look over the other three 
                  suits before playing to the first trick. It is uncanny how 
                  many makable contracts are lost when declarer plays too 
                  quickly at trick one. In fact, entire books have been devoted 
                  to the subject. 
                
                Most players 
                are so excited to become declarer that as soon as dummy is 
                tabled, they are off and running. Even if they are one of the 
                five best players in the world, they can’t play effectively at 
                that speed.
 
                By the 
                way:  
                There are lots of little things you can do to help partner when 
                tabling dummy. Alternate colors — do not put the spades next to 
                the clubs. Place the higher-ranked cards closest to you. Make 
                sure to space the cards neatly so that partner can easily see 
                how many you have in each suit. You get the picture. 
                Page 20 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                Thrifty is Nifty 
                When 
                in doubt, make the “cheapest” bid. 
                Trust me, 
                this works. Here is a good example. 
                West   North   
                East     South 
                  —       
                1 Pass       1  
                Pass     2 Pass      ??? 
                
                 J3  A98542  Q9  AJ10 
                Bid 3NT. On 
                a heart lead, all you need from partner to score this up is the
                
                
                 A 
                or the  K. 
                That’s not too much to expect after his free 
                
                2  bid. 
                Partner’s 
                jump shift was game-forcing, but you have loftier goals. Over 2 , 
                most players would routinely rebid their six-card heart suit. 
                However, 3  is “expensive” (it bypasses 2NT, 3  and 3  ) 
                and misdirected (your hearts are probably too weak for 6  if partner has a doubleton). 
                You should 
                make the cheapest bid, 2NT, which has many advantages. It 
                assures partner that clubs are under control, and allows him to: 
                Rebid 3 with a six-card suit. That would be wonderful news — 6  here we come. 
                Bid 3 with three-card support. Your six-card suit is now looking good, 
                as is a heart slam. 
                Cheap bids — 
                they lead to good auctions, better contracts and best of all, 
                very happy partners. 
                Page 21 
                © 2001 - Marty Bergen 
 
                
                2   Hand Evaluation    
                23 
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