Aaron Haspel – Page 3 – The Gee Chronicles

Aaron Haspel

Oct 092003
 

“I personally do not care for invitational raises altogether, because they force the partner to make a decision without really knowing with certainty the contents of the captain’s hand.”

 Permalink  October 9, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 092003
 

“The NT bid used as an acceptance to an invitation by the captain, is a negative answer and does not necessarily reflects the possession of a balanced hand nor a stopper in all the unbid suits named by the team.”

 Permalink  October 9, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 092003
 

“A game force bid is not necessary to reach game. It can be replaced by a cascade of 1 round forcing bid, at the expense of purity of the auction.”

 Permalink  October 9, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 092003
 

“Some players seem to think that making a negative double with a 5 card major is right. It is not, regardless of the cards held in that suit.”

 Permalink  October 9, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 092003
 

“Now that you have acquired the panoply of the perfect bridge player, let’s review it in a more global way, the strategies you may use to reach your contracts, or force the opponents to miss theirs.”

 Permalink  October 9, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 092003
 

“In some very sophisticated systems, point counts is all that matters at that point, because the distribution factor is dealt with a very precise and specific way after the opening statement is made, but for other systems, like SAYC or 2/1GF, there is some flexibility concerning the estimation of the points value of the hand when making the opening statement.”

 Permalink  October 9, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 082003
 

“A new breed of highly gifted players is actually able to play 3NT with 24 pts, 4 in a major with 25 points, 5 in a minor with 27 points, a small slam with 30 points and a grand slam with 34 points with a good chance of success.”

 Permalink  October 8, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 082003
 

“Gerard’s tip of the night: DECLARER PLAY: Each declarer play is like a battle. Prepare for battle. Count your winning tricks, your loosing tricks. Make a plan of attack to better your chances of winning the remaining ones.”

 Permalink  October 8, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 082003
 

“Gerard’s tip of the night. PLAY LIKE THE EXPERTS: When making an opening lead against a slam, lead your ace unless there is a compelling reason not to.”

 Permalink  October 8, 2003  No Responses »

Oct 082003
 

“Gerard’s tip of the night: ABOUT LEADS: Non-standard leads usually show non-standard hands. Use non-standard leads with extreme caution.”

 Permalink  October 8, 2003  No Responses »