Tuesday Afternoon
Italy vs South Korea
Revisited
This was the match that really mattered, and during Italy's 7th
Round match many references were made to it, by players, spectators,
directors, caddies and even foreigners. At halftime, Italy were
leading 1-0 and looking comfortable. The match in fact had a
sensational start, with South Korea getting a penalty after three
minutes when more than one Italian ran down more than one Korean in
the penalty area with the ball nowhere near. When Buffon elegantly
stopped the penalty (his specialty) an audible sigh of relief went
through the whole of God's own bridge country. Was this an omen, a
message of the gods, about what they had in store for us, poor
bridge players?
The organisers of these Championships had decided to put the
Italy v. Netherlands match in the match schedule in such a way that
it would partly coincide with The Real Thing discussed above. How
could they know beforehand that Italy, for reasons only known by the
FIFA referees, would not win their qualifying group and thus would
have to play at 13.30 hrs. instead of a peaceful 8.30 hrs? Rumours
were that it was decided NOT to show this match on Vu-Graph because
of a strike threat by the Vu-Graph personnel. Well, looking at the
long Italian tradition with these "scioperi" this may or may not be
true, but the few foreigners who had undertaken the long journey to
the Vu-Graph Auditorium thus were deprived of a wonderful match to
watch. Below, we are pleased to report a selection from the many
beautiful hands that came along.
Right on the first board, Muller-De Wijs made their intentions
clear to Bocchi-Duboin:
Board 1. Dealer North. None Vul.
|
|
ª 5 © K 7 6 2 ¨ Q 10 7 4 3 § J 7 4 |
ª J 10 9 7 3 2 © 9 5 ¨ K 8 6 § 8 2 |
|
ª A K Q © J 10 8 ¨ A 2 § Q 10 9 6 5 |
|
ª 8 6 4 © A Q 4 3 ¨ J 9 5 § A K 3 |
Open Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Jansma |
Sementa |
Verhees |
Versace |
|
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
2ª |
All Pass |
Here, Sementa-Versace had left their opponents in peace at 2ª for a quiet +140 to the
Netherlands.
Closed Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Duboin |
De Wijs |
Bocchi |
Muller |
|
Pass |
1§ |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
2ª |
Dble |
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
Pass |
4ª |
Dble |
All Pass |
|
|
|
Simon de Wijs did well to make a very aggressive take-out
double with his good distribution. From then on, it was very
difficult to judge who could make what. Muller, holding no
wasted values in spades either, could not believe his partner
would be so weak, so he jumped to 4© clearly expecting to make that
contract. In a sense he was right, as only the diamond ruff
(immediately or, not so difficult, after a spade lead) will
set it.
When 4© came round
to Bocchi, he pondered for a long time before finally deciding
to take the save. ªAKQ
certainly had little defensive value. To finish the good work,
Muller doubled 4ª,
which just went one off as there were four top losers. Bauke
must have felt a little disappointed after this hand, but the
first swing went to the Netherlands: 6-0. |
|
WIJS Simon De,
Netherlands |
Two boards later, both NS pairs did extremely well in the
auction, only to destroy the advantage gained in the play:
Board 3. Dealer South. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª 7 6 4 3 © A K Q 5 ¨ A 4 2 § K 6 |
ª Q J 10 5 © 4 ¨ K Q 10 9 5 3 § 7 4 |
|
ª 9 2 © 10 9 7 3 ¨ 7 § A Q J 8 3 2 |
|
ª A K 8 © J 8 6 2 ¨ J 8 6 § 10 9 5 |
At both tables South passed and West did NOT open a weak two in
diamonds, though this was part of the EW gadgets. North then opened
1NT and, again at both tables, East had to pass, as this too was
part of the EW gadgets. South launched a Stayman 2§ and now both Wests came to life with 2¨. North went on to bid 2©, as one would expect, and when
East passed again South had to make a decision about the level of
the final heart contract. To the surprise of the onlookers, and
maybe of many of the other participants at other tables as well,
BOTH Souths elected to pass.
So no swing, but very well bid by both teams. In the open room
Jansma complimented his screenmate Versace with his inspired
pass.
No swing it was, because strangely enough both declarers did not
match their partners' fine bidding judgement and went down in what
very much looks like a cold contract, certainly on paper. You can
either play off the two top spades and ruff the 4th round later, or
cash a top spade and play a club to the king and ace to ruff a club
in hand later. There is one proviso: take the risk of ending up
under the bridges of the river Thames for the remainder of your
bridge career by not drawing more than one round op trumps before
going for this manoeuvre.
On the next board, a big swing was in the air again when the
Dutch reached a game not bid by Italy. If that had something to do
with the fact that in the open room the board had been turned 180
degrees we will probably never know:
Board 4. Dealer West. All Vul.
|
|
ª 8 5 2 © 7 6 ¨ Q 9 8 6 5 4 § A K |
ª K Q J 10 6 © A K 9 4 3 ¨ A 7 § 4 |
|
ª 4 3 © J 10 ¨ K J § Q 9 7 6 5 3 2 |
|
ª A 9 7 © Q 8 5 2 ¨ 10 3 2 § J 10 8 |
Open Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Verhees |
Versace |
Jansma |
Sementa |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
4© |
All Pass |
|
|
Against 4©, Versace led
the §K and switched to a
diamond which Verhees won in dummy with the king. Declarer's next
move of course was to drive out the ªA. Sementa won the second round of the suit
and returned a club. Declarer ruffed and Versace contributed the
king. Declarer's plan of playing a low trump now to the jack failed
when North was able to win the queen and play the last club. Verhees
had to ruff this and found himself fatally short of trumps now. One
down, Italy a lucky escape for +100.
Declarer could or perhaps should have made ten tricks if he wins
the first diamond trick in dummy and runs the ©J. If it holds and trumps are no worse than
4-2, the hand is already over as he can overtake the next heart. If
North can win, he cannot effectively play any minor to fatally
shorten declarer.
Closed Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Duboin |
De Wijs |
Bocchi |
Muller |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
3ª |
All Pass |
1NT was forcing and 2§
showed any strong hand. 3§
was natural and weak, so when after 3© Bocchi could do no more than give preference
for spades, there it rested. On a diamond lead the contract was
never in danger and Duboin emerged with 11 tricks for +200 or 7 IMPs
to Italy to lead 8-6 where they were bound to lose another10 and be
down 16-1…
On Board 5 both teams bid and made a normal looking 4ª for a push. On six the spotlights
shine on soccer lovers Jansma and Versace:
Board 6. Dealer East. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª K 10 8 4 2 © 10 ¨ J 8 5 2 § A K 4 |
ª J 7 © A 8 6 5 4 2 ¨ A K 7 § J 8 |
|
ª A Q 9 5 © J 9 3 ¨ 10 6 4 3 § Q 6 |
|
ª 6 3 © K Q 7 ¨ Q 9 § 10 9 7 5 3 2 |
In the Closed Room Giorgio Duboin played 4© after a spade overcall by North. Simon de
Wijs led his top clubs and shifted to a diamond. Declarer took the
queen, played the ªJ, covered
by North and East. Next came a sneaky ©J, suavely ducked by Bauke Muller and by West
as well ! Declarer cashed the ©A and gave South his last trump. Later
declarer played the rest of the trumps and North was caught in a
show-up squeeze: ten tricks.
Proceedings in the Open Room were almost the same. Almost ? Well,
Antonio Sementa led a top club, but switched immediately to a
diamond for queen and ace of Jan Jansma, who played the ªJ, to the king and ace. Of course
Jansma continued with this smart ©J, but Alfredo Versace covered and declarer
won the ace. He went on with a heart to the nine and king and
Versace pressed in diamonds. Jansma won the king and rattled off all
his trumps. Here North was squeezed in no less than three suits and
declarer ended up with eleven tricks.
Immediately when the hand was over Jansma began to shout
'Stupid play, stupid defence'.
LAURIA Lorenzo, Italy |
|
Nobody understood what he exactly meant but
he explained that, in with the second round of trumps, Versace
should have switched to his second spade in order to break
communications with dummy. That way South's last trump could
still take care of dummy's high spade. 'However, I could avoid
that position by playing the ©8 in the second round of trumps and
leave the ©9 as an
entry.'
Sharp analysis, and may be a prove that at
the table both calcio lovers had something else on their
minds.
Still, on the very next board Jansma showed
that he had control of himself when he displayed the same
timing as Duboin did in the Closed
Room: |
Board 7. Dealer South. All Vul.
|
|
ª 7 6 5 © J 7 5 ¨ 3 § A K J 7 5 4 |
ª J 8 4 3 2 © A ¨ J 9 6 5 2 § 10 6 |
|
ª A K Q © Q 10 8 6 4 2 ¨ A Q 8 § 3 |
|
ª 10 9 © K 9 3 ¨ K 10 7 4 § Q 9 8 2 |
Duboin and Jansma played in 4ª and received the lead of the ¨3. They were pretty sure that this
card was a singleton. After all the auction had been revealing:
closed North had opened with 3§ and in the Open Room North opened the bidding
with 1§ and South had
responded with 1NT.
Anyway, both Duboin and Jansma did well to rise with the ¨A at trick one, otherwise they
would go down quickly: ¨K,
diamond ruff, club to the queen and another diamond ruff. Two high
trumps were cashed (one would do as well) and then came a club.
North won the jack and returned a trump. At this point, at both
tables the ¨8 was played from
dummy, ducked by everybody. An elegant ten tricks.
Board 8 to 11 were all pushes, but not for Alfredo Versace, who,
just before he had to lead against 4ª on board 9, learned from a monitor that South
Korea had equalized and for Jan Jansma who suggested on 11 that if
would come down to penalties, the bridge players should stop and
watch the soccer match. Versace nodded approvingly and then came
12:
Dealer West. N/S Vul. |
|
ª J 8 7 3 2 © 9 3 2 ¨ K 7 6 § Q 7 |
ª A K 10 © K 5 ¨ A 10 9 4 § A 10 6 5 |
|
ª Q 6 5 © A Q 10 4 ¨ Q 3 2 § K J 9 |
|
ª 9 4 © J 8 7 6 ¨ J 8 5 § 8 4 3 2 |
In spite of the 32 HCP, slam - six no - is not a great contract.
Bocchi-Duboin managed to stay out of it and in fact made eleven
tricks in 3NT. This was their auction:
Closed Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Duboin |
De Wijs |
Bocchi |
Muller |
2§ |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
In the Open Room Jansma-Verhees had a different opinion:
West |
North |
East |
South |
Jansma |
Sementa |
Verhees |
Versace |
1§ |
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
2¨
* |
Pass |
2ª
** |
Pass |
2NT *** |
Pass |
6NT |
All Pass |
* game forcing relay ** 11 or more HCP, four card
hearts *** 18-19 HCP, balanced
North led the ©2. Jansma
inserted the 10, covered by the jack and king. Declarer entered the
table with the ªQ and played
a diamond to the ten. North won the king and returned another heart
for the ace. Jansma cashed the ©Q as well, pitching a club from his hand. The
only thing he had to do was to find the §Q, which in fact he did. Eleven IMPs to The
Netherlands.
Right after the board Jansma explained that he was not sure about
the heart distribution, but somehow felt that his LHO was in
possession of the §Q. Right
he was. Suppose however that declarer could work out the heart
position - after all the lead gave some indication -, then he should
have squeezed South. Let's pick up the play were Jansma cashed the
©Q and pitched a club. You
now run your three remaining diamonds and you cash your top spades
as well. Then you reach this endplay in which you know for sure that
clubs are 2-2 and you simple play for the drop the §Q:
|
ª J © - ¨ - § Q 7 |
ª - © - ¨ - § A 10 6 |
|
ª - © 4 ¨ - § K J |
|
ª - © 8 ¨ - § 8 4 |
The Netherlands gave back these IMPs with some interest on the
next board when De Wijs did not make the most straightforward lead.
The contract was the same in both rooms.
Board 13. Dealer North. All Vul.
|
|
ª J 10 8 4 2 © K Q ¨ Q 5 § K J 8 2 |
ª A 9 3 © J 5 ¨ A J 10 9 8 7 2 § 6 |
|
ª Q 5 © A 10 9 6 3 ¨ K 6 4 3 § 10 5 |
|
ª K 7 6 © 8 7 4 2 ¨ - § A Q 9 7 4 3 |
Open Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Jansma |
Sementa |
Verhees |
Versace |
|
1ª |
Pass |
2§ |
2¨ |
Pass * |
3©
** |
4ª |
5¨ |
Dbl |
All Pass |
|
* 3§ would have shown
extra's ** hearts and diamonds
Antonio Sementa led the ªJ
and the defence duly got their three tricks.
Closed Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Duboin |
De Wijs |
Bocchi |
Muller |
|
1ª |
Pass |
3ª |
4¨ |
Pass |
5¨ |
Dble |
All Pass |
|
|
|
As the bidding suggests shortness in spades with either opponent,
a lead of that suit might well be a loss of time, De Wijs must have
thought when he put the ©K on
the table. Seven diamond and four heart tricks later he found out
that for once, leading a top spade would have set the contract in
Pappa-Mamma fashion. Italy +750 and 14 IMPs to go back into the lead
22-18.
Not much happened after this board though at the table Versace
continuously was alert of what happened in the soccer game which was
still going on. On board 16 Alfredo slammed his fist on the table
with a big bang when the Koreans scored their golden goal. In fact
he was upset that nobody - except Jansma of course - noticed the
defeat of the Italian soccer team: ''Unbelievable, we are Europeans
and nobody seems to care about our defeat !"
Slight overbidding and/or misplaying in both rooms by the
Italians levelled the score again on the next board, so the last six
boards of the match might be considered as "Extra Time," the
difference being of course that there would be no more sudden deaths
except the one in Daejon.
On the last board to be shown in this report Versace should have
been awarded a few Golden Goals for his beautiful play, but the net
result was that he lost 2 IMPs, exactly the losing margin for Italy
in this high-level encounter. The final score thus became 30-28 to
the Netherlands, still counting as 15-15 V.P., but Italy had lost
this match as well.
Board 17. Dealer North. None Vul.
|
|
ª K 10 8 7 5 © 10 8 7 ¨ 8 7 6 § 4 2 |
ª 9 4 2 © K Q 3 2 ¨ 10 9 2 § K 9 6 |
|
ª Q © 9 6 4 ¨ Q 5 3 § Q 10 8 7 5 3 |
|
ª A J 6 3 © A J 5 ¨ A K J 4 § A J |
The normal contract is 4ª
by South, the strong hand. How would you play against a trump lead
as Jansma did? Draw three rounds of trumps, cash the ¨AK and play §A and another as Versace did. Either defender
will have to concede the contract. A very good textbook play but to
no real avail when Duboin led a diamond, enabling Muller to emerge
with 12 tricks.
Still, after a trump lead there are more 100 % safety plays in
4ª. Draw the drumps and play
a diamond from dummy to the jack. If West wins the queen and returns
a club for instance, take the ace, eliminate the diamonds, ruffing
the fourth one in dummy - when they don't break - and exit with a
club. Cashing the ¨A first
will do as well, even in the unlikely case when it's ruffed, because
sooner or later defenders have to open the hearts. This safety play
saves an IMP in fact. |