Thrust Parry and
Riposte
When Austria met Italy in Round 10 this deal gave rise to one of
those classic situations where there are countless possibilities in
both the play and defence.
Board 7. Dealer South. All Vul.
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|
ª A 7 5 4 © J 6 ¨ A Q 5 § A K 10 5 |
ª Q 9 8 © K Q 9 8 ¨ 10 3 § J 9 7 4 |
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ª J 10 3 2 © 5 3 2 ¨ K J 8 6 4 § 3 |
|
ª K 6 © A 10 7 4 ¨ 9 7 2 § Q 8 6 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Lauria |
Gloyer |
Versace |
Schifko |
|
|
|
Pass |
Pass |
1§* |
1¨ |
2¨* |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
|
One Club was Blue and Two Diamonds was either 4-4-4-1 or
balanced
East led the two of spades and declarer put up the king, played a
club to the ace, a club to the queen and took two more tricks in the
suit, East discarding two diamonds and a heart. Placing East
with five diamonds and seeking to remove possible exit cards
declarer sought to remove East's possible exit cards by playing a
heart to the ace and a heart. Seeing dummy now had no entry, West
cashed his other heart winner to produce this ending:
|
ª A 7 © - ¨ A Q 5 § - |
ª Q 9 © 9 ¨ 10 3 § - |
|
ª J 10 © - ¨ K J 8 § - |
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ª 6 © 10 ¨ 9 7 2 § - |
At this point, West played a low diamond and East won with the
jack and played back a spade. If West puts up the queen then
declarer can win and throw East in to lead into the diamond tenace.
So West played the nine but declarer won, cashed the ace of spades
and exited with a spade, forcing West to present dummy with the
ninth trick.
In the five card ending, West must exit with the nine of spades.
Declarer takes the ace and exits with a spade, but dummy is
squeezed!
Declarer played very well, but after taking the clubs it may be
better to run the jack of hearts. Say West wins and plays the ten of
diamonds. Declarer covers with the queen and East wins and plays
back a spade. Declarer ducks, wins the next trick, cashes his
remaining ace to remove West's last exit card and ducks a heart to
West who is endplayed. There are many variations, but there is no
winning defence.
Bangkok Blunder
By Brian Senior
Is there any law that says that the Hand of the Day has to be one
on which someone did something good? No? Just as well, because today
I offer you a little light relief from the PABF Championships in
sunny Bangkok.
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ª A Q 10 9 7 3 © J 8 ¨ A Q J 10 § 7 |
ª 8 6 2 © 10 9 7 5 4 2 ¨ 3 § 8 3 2 |
|
ª K J 5 4 © A K Q 6 ¨ 9 8 § A Q 6 |
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ª -- © 3 ¨ K 7 6 5 4 2 § K J 10 9 5 4 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Moriyama |
Barrack |
Takasaki |
Cumpstone |
|
|
1§ |
Pass |
Pass |
1ª |
1NT |
Pass |
2¨ |
All Pass |
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|
It is not often that you have 19 HCP as dummy and your side fails
to make a single trick. In the second round robin match between New
Zealand and Japan in the Ladies Series, that is precisely the
misfortune which befell the Japanese East/West pair.
West's second bid was intended as a transfer but not read as such
by East who passed. South could see what had happened, of course,
and was not about to do something silly and allow her vulnerable
opponents a second chance.
Against 2¨, North led her
ace of spades, on which South discarded the heart loser. A second
spade was ruffed by South who returned a small diamond. North won
the diamond and switched to her club and declarer, desperate to take
a few tricks, finessed the queen. When that lost to the king,
declarer could no longer make a trick as North got two club ruffs to
establish South's suit. Two Diamonds minus eight for -800!
At the end of the hand the Japanese East asked 'How many tricks?'
and, when told 'None', said 'No, How many tricks?'. Again the answer
was 'Zero', at which stage she said 'No jokes, how many tricks?'.
East was still shaking her head several boards later.
In the other room, Japan made 5¨ doubled on the North/South cards but +550
meant a 6 IMP loss for them.
Mind you, there were worse fates available to East/West on this
deal. The New Zealand Open team conceded 6¨ by leading a trump. Ouch!
Double Bravo
"They are too good for Four
Spades"
Round 9, Sweden -
Slovenia
Board 10. Dealer East. All Vul.
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|
ª A J 7 © 10 8 7 5 3 ¨ 5 4 § Q J 5 |
ª K Q 9 6 4 © K Q 2 ¨ K 8 2 § A 2 |
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ª 10 2 © 9 4 ¨ A J 9 3 § 10 9 7 6 3 |
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ª 8 5 3 © A J 6 ¨ Q 10 7 6 § K 8 4 |
Contract 2§, opening lead
¨5
The Slovenian South, Matija Senk, realized immediately that the
contract will be fulfilled because of the 3-3 break in clubs and so
he played the ¨Q at trick
three from dummy. Ace and a small club to the jack and another
diamond to the nine and ten and a diamond ruff, one down and +50 for
Slovenia meaning 5 IMPs. Comment from the Swedish player as pointed
above.
After board 20 and the final calculation we have the same comment
about the very good and sympathetic Swedish team. Nevertheless, the
defence was very nice and thoughtful. Cooperation by North was also
at an appropriate level and deserves to be mentioned. Bravo for
Slovenia, Bravo for Sweden.
Sponsor's Corner
The Slovenian Bridge Team expresses gratitude to its sponsors :
ITS, NIL, SIMP, Repro, Difra, Krka, Lesnina and Slovenica, whose
donations help us to participate at these
championships. |