Italy vs France
Open Round 22
Italy against France on VuGraph, what a great start of the second
week of the European Championships!
After a couple of small swings board 7 displayed something which
rarely occurs in modern championships: Giorgio Duboin going down in
the same contract that has been made at the other table.
Board 7. Dealer South. All Vul.
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ª 10 5 © Q 10 5 ¨ 8 3 2 § 9 6 5 4 3 |
ª 4 © K 9 7 4 2 ¨ A 10 4 § A 10 7 2 |
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ª K J 8 7 6 3 © A 6 ¨ Q J 7 § K 8 |
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ª A Q 9 2 © J 8 3 ¨ K 9 6 5 § Q J |
Against Philippe Toffier's 3NT North led a
diamond to the queen, king and ace. Declarer, relying on a
favourable heart split, easily made ten tricks. Against his
3NT Giorgio Duboin got a diamond lead as well. He won the ten
in hand and next made the interesting enough play of a spade
to the six ! South won the nine and returned the ¨K. Declarer took the ace,
crossed to dummy with a third round of diamonds and -rather
unfortunately (for his side)- continued with a low spade,
discarding a heart from hand. Now the contract couldn't be
made any more since the defenders were able to unblock in
hearts and therefore could cash three spade tricks, a heart
and the 13th diamond. |
|
DUGUET Michel,
France |
Did Duboin take his best chance ? Clearly he didn't want to rely
on the hearts 3-3, so spades was a logical alternative (where did we
hear that phrase before ? ). In the VuGraph auditorium Guido Ferraro
explained that a spade to the jack is the best line of play in order
to avoid losing more than three spade tricks, which in fact is the
maximum number of spades which declarer can afford to lose. After
the jack loses to the queen, declarer later should play the ªK to pin a possible nine or ten.
Anyway, 12 IMPs to France.
On the next board Italy won back most of these IMPs:
Board 8. Dealer West. None Vul.
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ª 7 5 3 2 © A Q 10 3 ¨ 9 7 6 § 8 3 |
ª K Q 9 © J 9 7 5 4 ¨ A 10 8 § Q 7 |
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ª J 8 4 © 6 ¨ K 5 4 § A K J 9 5 2 |
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ª A 10 6 © K 8 2 ¨ Q J 3 2 § 10 6 4 |
In the Closed room North led the ª5 against 3NT. South won the ace and returned
the suit: ten tricks. In the Open room Lauria led the same card
against the same contract. On VuGraph we could see how Versace won
the trick and in a split second returned the ©2, where after the defenders took their four
heart tricks: down one. 10 IMPs to Italy.
And on the very next board the Italians increased their margin
again when on first hand Versace decided to open a thin weak two in
spades, which was passed at the other table. Knowing about a six
card spade suit was important for the opposite hand, a balanced 26
HCP count, to reach 7NT. The French bid 6NT only.
Board 9. Dealer North. E/W Vul.
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ª Q 9 8 6 5 2 © 8 7 2 ¨ 6 § A 7 3 |
ª 7 3 © J 10 3 ¨ J 10 9 4 3 2 § J 8 |
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ª J 10 © Q 9 5 4 ¨ 8 7 5 § Q 6 5 2 |
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ª A K 4 © A K 6 ¨ A K Q § K 10 9 4 |
On Board 13 East had a difficult decision to make:
ª Q 6 5 © K Q 8 6 5 ¨ A § A
10 9 2
All vulnerable you open 1©, partner responds 2¨, you rebid 2© and partner rebids 3¨. Of course it's a matter of agreements and
style what you should bid now. In real life Norberto Bocchi bid 3NT,
where Michel Duguet passed. West had:
ª A 9 8 © 7 ¨ K
Q 9 8 7 5 3 § 8 5
the diamonds behaved and 3NT was on. Another 10 IMP's to
Italy.
On Board 18 we saw another great Italian player fail to make a
vulnerable game contract which he could have made:
Board 18. Dealer East. N/S Vul.
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ª A 7 6 5 2 © 7 4 ¨ 10 5 § Q 5 4 2 |
ª J 8 © Q 6 5 2 ¨ Q 7 6 3 § 10 7 3 |
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ª 4 © K J 10 3 ¨ A 9 8 4 2 § K J 8 |
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ª K Q 10 9 3 © A 9 8 ¨ K J § A 9 6 |
In 4ª Michel Bessis got a
heart lead. East inserted the jack, ducked by declarer. Bessis won
the next heart, drew the trumps, ruffed the third heart and played a
diamond from dummy. East rose with the ace and fired back a diamond.
This was the position:
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ª 7 © - ¨ - § Q 5 4 |
ª - © Q ¨ - § 10 7 3 |
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ª - © 10 ¨ 9 § K J 8 |
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ª Q © - ¨ - § A 9 6 |
In view of the bidding, Bessis was pretty sure that the §K was behind the queen. Bessis,
who needed three more tricks for his contract, played the §6, intending to run it to East's
eight. West however inserted the ten and Bessis countered by calling
for dummy's queen. At this point Bocchi could win his king, but then
had to lead from his §J8 into
declarer's §A9 tenace. France
plus 420. Well played, Michel !
BESSIS Michel, France |
|
Lauria reached the same ending in the same contract. He
cashed the §A and
played a club to the queen. When the king was not doubleton,
East was not endplayed and Lauria was down one.
On the very last board West had a tough decision with:
ª A J 10 5 © Q J 7 3 ¨ Q 4 § J 3 2 |
All vulnerable. You pass, LHO opens 1§, partner overcalls 1NT (balanced, 15-18 HCP).
Would you bid 3NT straight away with all those soft values or would
you prefer Stayman ? Both West players went for the latter option
and ended up in 4ª. Wrong,
since partner had:
ª 9 2 © A K 10 2 ¨ A K 6 2 § Q 9 4
On both tables 4ª went down on the club ruff while 3NT is an
obvious make. |