In perhaps the most dramatic finish in
Bermuda Bowl history, USA I gained 12 IMPs on the last board
of the event to emerge with an amazing 204-303 victory over
Italy.
The issue was not settled, however, until
an appeals committee had rendered a ruling on a disputed
ending to the final board. In the closed room, Eric Rodwell
and Jeff Meckstroth had gone plus 400 against 4© by Italy’s Norberto Bocchi
and Giorgio Duboin.
In the open room, Paul Soloway had doubled
Lorenzo Lauria in 5¨.
If Lauria could get out for down one – minus 100 – it would be
an 11-IMP gain and the match would be tied.
As play wound down, Lauria had already lost
two tricks and still had the trump ace out against him – plus
the losing ©9 in his
hand. With a singleton spade in his hand, Lauria had played
the king from dummy’s holding of ªK Q to five. Soloway could have cashed
the ©10 to guarantee
two down, but he played back a spade instead.
Lauria’s partner had left the table after
putting down the dummy, so Lauria was playing the cards
himself. Lauria apparently expected Soloway to cash his
winning heart, so he pulled the ª7 from dummy – which held only clubs and
spades – realizing too late that a spade had been played. He
tried to change his play to the queen, which would have
allowed him to discard the losing heart and get out for minus
100. Hamman, who had started with the ªJ 10 doubleton, had played the jack to
the first lead of the suit, and he covered the ª7 with the 10.
A tournament director was called, and the
ruling was that the ª7
was a played card, resulting in two down for minus 300. That
gave the Americans a 12-IMP gain and a 1-IMP victory.
The Italians appealed the ruling, but the
appeals committee, citing rule 45B from the law book, backed
the director. The rule states that when a card is touched it
is played.
In the World Transnational Open Teams, the
Italian Lavazza squad cruised to a win over Zhuang of
China.
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