Strong pass
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In the card game of
bridge A bridge is a structure built to span a physical obstacle (such as a body of water, valley, road, or rail) without blocking the way underneath. It is constructed for the purpose of providing passage over the obstacle, which is usually somethi ...
, a strong pass is an opening pass that indicates a strong hand, typically with a minimum of 11–16 points. Strong pass
bidding system A bidding system in contract bridge is the set of Glossary of contract bridge terms#agreement, agreements and understandings assigned to Glossary of contract bridge terms#call, calls and sequences of calls used by a Glossary of contract bridge te ...
s are of a quite different nature from the more typical "natural" systems, but share some similarities with strong club systems. Strong pass systems are sometimes called "forcing pass" systems; the term "strong pass" is preferred here to avoid confusion with a different meaning of the term " forcing pass" in bridge.


Features

Since "pass" is used to indicate strong hands, weaker hands—even those with no points—must make an opening bid. Typically, one bid is used for extremely weak hands (less than 8 or 9 points); this is called a "fert" bid (short for
fertilizer A fertilizer (American English) or fertiliser (British English; see spelling differences) is any material of natural or synthetic origin that is applied to soil or to plant tissues to supply plant nutrients. Fertilizers may be distinct from ...
, as it is used when your hand is a load of manure). All other bids show limited-strength hands of various distributions. The fert bid is usually between 1 and 1; higher bids are more preemptive, but correspondingly more dangerous. Because of the necessity of using a fert bid, the limited openings usually have a significantly lower range than in strong-club systems, and very weak
preempt Preempt (also spelled "pre-empt") is a bid in contract bridge whose primary objectives are (1) to thwart opponents' ability to bid to their best contract, with some safety, and (2) to fully describe one's hand to one's partner in a single bid. A ...
ive bids on the 2 and 3 levels are allowed. The basic motivation of strong pass systems is to reserve as much bidding room as possible for strong hands, and to be as preemptive as is safely possible with weak hands. Strong pass systems are often coupled with relay systems for precisely describing strong hands, and limited bids are heavily oriented towards finding low-level major-suit contracts, with "major-suit" bids (i.e. bids that promise a certain major-suit holding, which are not necessarily natural heart or spade bids — most strong-pass systems are highly artificial) typically promising only four cards in a particular major. Note that a strong-pass partnership will ''always'' open the bidding when playing first position, or when second position after an opposing natural pass. Thus, partnerships playing against a strong pass system will be on defense much more often than normal, and must have highly developed defensive methods for handling situations where the partnership possesses game strength or more. As a result, strong-pass systems are typically prohibited at all but the highest levels of tournament play. A sample strong-pass system is the TresBoof system. The outline of the opening bids of this system is as follows, with relative frequencies attached: *Pass (21%): 14+, any shape. *1 (17%): 8-13, 4+ hearts, possibly longer minor, possibly 4-4 majors. *1 (16%): 8-13, 4+ spades, possibly longer minor. *1(11%): 0-8, any shape. Usually no 5-card suit except possibly clubs (since an off-shape
weak two The weak two bid is a common used in the game of contract bridge, where an opening bid of two diamonds, hearts or spades signifies a weak hand, typically containing a long suit. It may be deployed within any system structure that offers a forcing ...
is safer, more descriptive, and more preemptive) *1 (10%): 9-13, balanced, no four-card major unless 4333. *1NT (3%): 9-13, 5+ diamonds, no four-card major. (Implies 6+ diamonds and/or 4 clubs). *2 (2%): 9-13, 5+ clubs, no four-card major. (Implies 6+ clubs and/or 4 diamonds). *2 (?): 4-8 weak 2 in major or 20-21 balanced, MULTI *2 (?): 4-8 hearts + minor *2 (?): 4-8 spades + another suit *2NT (0.3%): 8-12, 5-5 or more in minors. *3NT (0.2%): 8-13, solid 7-card or 8-card minor. Note that 1 and 1 are "transfer openings"; if responder has a strong hand, he accepts the transfer by bidding 1 or 1 (respectively), initiating a relay sequence.


Restrictions

According to the World Bridge Federation System Policy,WBF System policy
/ref> a system is classified as a '' Highly unusual method'' (HUM) if "a Pass in the opening position shows at least the values generally accepted for an opening bid of one, even if there are alternative weak possible interpretations of the pass" or "by partnership agreement an opening bid at the one level may be weaker than pass." Thus, strong pass systems are classified as HUM and allowed only on competitions of
Bermuda Bowl The Bermuda Bowl is a biennial contract bridge world championship for national . It is contested every odd-numbered year under the auspices of the World Bridge Federation (WBF), alongside the Venice Cup (women), the d'Orsi Senior Bowl and the W ...
/
Venice Cup The Venice Cup is a biennial world championship contract bridge tournament for national of Women. It is contested every odd-number year under the auspices of the World Bridge Federation (WBF), alongside the Bermuda Bowl (Open) and d'Orsi Bowl (S ...
level, with additional provisions that the pair playing HUM method must submit their convention cards in advance, and their team loses the right to choose the opponents (i.e. they must seat first and let the opposing team select the lineup). HUM systems are banned altogether on lower-level competitions, especially on pairs events (as a round of 2-3 boards is too short to require all other players to prepare the defense against strong pass in advance). Sponsoring organizations on lower levels are permitted to impose lesser restrictions, but that is seldom the case; thus, the strong pass is mostly limited to world team competitions, special invitation tournaments and friendly games.


See also

* Brown sticker * Forcing pass


References


External links


TresBoof system
(see above).

uses a 1 fert bid and 1 as "semi-fert" bid (around 7-9 points), along with 4-card major transfer openings, as in TresBoof.

uses a two-way opening pass (17+ points, or 9-11 balanced) and 1 fert bid, a strong but limited 1 bid (13-16 unbalanced or 15-17 balanced), and natural 4-card major openings.

uses a two-way opening pass/fert (16+ or 0-7 points).

is based on
Precision Club Precision Club is a bidding system in the game of contract bridge. It is a strong club system developed in 1969 for C. C. Wei by Alan Truscott, and used by Taiwan teams in 1969. Their success in placing second at the 1969 Bermuda Bowl (and Wei's ...
, maintaining the strong 1 opening; the initial pass shows 8-17 points unsuitable for other bids, and the only fert bid is 1.
Dejeuner
A derivative of TresBoof that uses symmetric rather than MOSCITO relays. {{WPCBIndex Contract bridge bidding