Chagas vs Welland 2nd
Half
For the second half of the match, the Chagas team remained seated
where it had been in the first half: Chagas-Brenner NS in the Closed
Room, and Gerner-Weinstein EW in the Open Room. Welland had brought
in Rosenberg-Zia to play NS on the Rama, and Levin-Weinstein stayed
where they were as EW in the Closed Room.
On the third board, Chagas increased their lead when
Garner-Weinstein ended up in a contract not affected by bad
breaks:
Board 17. Dealer North. None Vul. |
|
ª Q 7 © A K 10 8 2 ¨ J 10 7 5 2 § 6 |
ª
K J 10 6 4 ©
Q ¨ A K 9 3 § 9 7 4 |
|
ª
A 5 © J 9 6
3 ¨ Q 8 § A Q J 3 2 |
|
ª 9 8 3 2 © 7 5 4 ¨ 6 4 § K 10 8 5 |
Open Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Rosenberg |
Garner |
Zia |
|
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2© |
Dble |
Pass |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
With all the hearts placed well for declarer, the defence had no
chance to do anything here. Garner lost two clubs and two hearts to
just land his contract. Chagas +400.
Closed Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Chagas |
Levin |
Brenner |
|
1© |
2§ |
2© |
Dble |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
4§ |
Pass |
5§ |
All Pass |
|
|
Chagas’ light distributional opening bid changed matters. As
Levin did not consider his heart stopper very solid, he decided to
settle for 5§, a contract in
which he could not avoid losing two trump tricks as well as one top
heart. Unlucky, but +50 to Chagas and 10 IMP’s to lead by 22
now.
The wildest board of the set produced no swing, but both tables
did their best to produce the most sensational auction:
Board 19. Dealer South. E/W Vul. |
|
ª 9 7 3 © A 4 ¨ K J 10 5 4 § 10 9 4 |
ª
A K 10 4 © Q
6 5 ¨ A Q 9 8
6 § 7 |
|
ª
- © J 10 9 7
2 ¨ 7 § A K J 6 5 3 2 |
|
ª Q J 8 6 5 2 © K 8 3 ¨ 3 2 § Q 8 |
Open Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Rosenberg |
Garner |
Zia |
|
|
|
2ª |
2NT |
3ª |
6§ |
Pass |
6¨ |
Pass |
6© |
All Pass |
Obviously, the very good spade holding was ample compensation for
the lack of a club stopper, but sometimes you have to pay the price.
After hearing partner bid 6§,
Weinstein felt a little uncomfortable, so he went to 6¨. At this point, we could see on
Vugraph that Michael Rosenberg at his turn was feeling quite
uncomfortable now, as he had no idea what would happen in any other
slam the opponents might go to. So he passed after a long huddle
and, according to what he had feared, Garner indeed introduced a new
slam denomination. There it rested as nobody felt sure enough to
double. When a trick was lost by declarer in the play, he went down
two, +200 to Welland.
Closed Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Chagas |
Levin |
Brenner |
|
|
|
2ª |
2NT |
3ª |
6§ |
All Pass |
Here too, East made the obvious jump to 6§. As Weinstein felt less uncomfortable here,
it rested in 6§ in which
declarer lost a club and two hearts for –200. No swing.
On the next board, we finally had a slam swing:
Board 20. Dealer West. All Vul. |
|
ª J 8 6 4 © 5 4 ¨ A K Q 6 § 10 5 2 |
ª
10 7 3 © J 8
7 ¨ 8 7 3 2 § Q 8 7 |
|
ª
5 © Q
2 ¨ J 10 9 5
4 § A K J 4 3 |
|
ª A K Q 9 2 © A K 10 9 6 3 ¨ - § 9 6 |
Open Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Rosenberg |
Garner |
Zia |
Pass |
Pass |
1§ |
2§ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
4¨ |
Pass |
4ª |
All Pass |
|
With the duplication in diamonds unveiled in time, nobody was
tempted. Welland +650.
Closed Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Chagas |
Levin |
Brenner |
Pass |
Pass |
1§ |
1© |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5¨ |
Pass |
6ª |
All Pass |
|
|
|
The auction had suggested club and diamond controls with NS, but
EW were not to believe this. They simply led clubs and continued the
suit to set the slam by one trick. Welland +100 and a maybe
unexpected 13 IMP’s to trail by only 8 now.
A few boards later, Chagas missed a chance to save the board:
Board 23. Dealer South. All Vul. |
|
ª K 9 6 4 © 7 ¨ 5 4 3 § K Q 6 3 2 |
ª
J 8 7 © A Q J
8 5 ¨ 7 § J 10 9 5 |
|
ª
A 10 5 3 2 ©
10 9 4 ¨ J 10
6 § A 4 |
|
ª Q © K 6 3 2 ¨ A K Q 9 8 2 § 8 7 |
Open Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Rosenberg |
Garner |
Zia |
|
|
|
1¨ |
1© |
Dble |
2¨ |
3¨ |
3© |
4¨ |
Pass |
5¨ |
All Pass |
|
|
|
Garner might have ventured a double here with two aces opposite
the vulnerable overcall to increase the stakes a little, but he
stayed quiet. Down two, Chagas +200 only. It seemed a fair enough
score, as NS were wide overboard here.
It could be worse, however:
Closed Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Chagas |
Levin |
Brenner |
|
|
|
1¨ |
1© |
Dble |
2¨ |
3NT |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble |
All Pass |
Levin indeed threw the hammer, and when Brenner-Chagas decided to
sit it they quickly were to regret it as there were only seven
tricks available. Welland +500 which turned out to be a swing of
only 7 IMP’s to them, but the match in fact stood at all square
now.
But then came a board that turned out to be decisive:
Board 25. Dealer North. E/W Vul. |
|
ª 9 2 © K 10 5 3 ¨ A Q 8 6 5 § 10 2 |
ª
K 5 4 3 © 7
2 ¨ J 10 § J 9 8 6 3 |
|
ª
10 6 © A Q J
9 ¨ K 9 § A K 7 5 4 |
|
ª A Q J 8 7 © 8 6 4 ¨ 7 4 3 2 § Q |
Open Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Rosenberg |
Garner |
Zia |
|
Pass |
1§ |
1ª |
3§ |
Dble |
Redble |
3¨ |
Pass |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
5§ |
All Pass |
Helped by the spade overcall and the take-out double, EW were
sort of able to locate most of the missing high cards as they ended
up at dazzling heights in 5§.
Trumps behaved (likely), the ªK was worth a trick (likely), the diamond
needed no guess (who knows?) and the heart finesse was right (would
you believe it?) so they chalked up a scintillating +600.
Closed Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Chagas |
Levin |
Brenner |
|
2¨ |
2NT |
3ª |
All Pass |
|
|
|
After Chagas found a weak-two in diamonds to open the bidding,
Diego Brenner threw more sand into the EW machines by introducing
his side suit – he could always retreat to diamonds, of course. When
nobody had anything more to say this unintentional contract had to
go down three for +150 to Welland, but a loss of 10 IMP’s.
On the next board, Garner produced a fine unblocking defence to
defeat a normal game, that had already gone down in the other
room.
Board 26. Dealer East. All Vul. |
|
ª 7 4 © 5 3 ¨ K J 9 8 7 5 § A 9 3 |
ª
9 5 © A K 7
2 ¨ Q 6 3 § 10 7 4 2 |
|
ª
J 10 8 3 2 ©
9 8 ¨ 10 4
2 § K 6 5 |
|
ª A K Q 6 © Q J 10 6 4 ¨ A § Q J 8 |
Open Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Rosenberg |
Garner |
Zia |
|
|
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
|
Closed Room: |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Weinstein |
Chagas |
Levin |
Brenner |
|
|
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
3NT |
So in both rooms they were playing 3NT, but from different sides
of the table. In the Closed Room, Weinstein had an easy club lead,
after which declarer had little chance as he went after the diamonds
by cashing dummy’s king rather early in the play. So the defence
came to two clubs, two top hearts and the ¨Q. Down one.
In the Open Room, Garner first of all found the not so easy club
lead away from his §Kxx. The
queen won in dummy, the ¨A
was unblocked and declarer led a top heart won by West. Weinstein
continued a club, ducked in dummy, and Garner cleared the suit. Next
came a heart to the ©J in
dummy, on which West played low – if the suit is continued, the
contract will be defeated out of hand, and he could not be sure
about the spade situation. Now, dummy’s top spades were cashed, on
which Garner had to unblock all his high spades to avoid being put
in with the last spade. This would give him two winners in the suit,
but then he would have to lead into declarer’s diamond tenace. So
when the ª6 held the trick,
dummy had to revert to hearts and the contract went down after all.
Well done!
Welland recouped some IMP’s on the last board, but Chagas had
just held on to win 45-42 and go through to the
quarterfinals. |