BRIDGE AT THE MIND SPORTS
OLYMPIAD
The 8th Mind Sports Olympiad takes place in Manchester. From the
24th of August until the 30th August there is a full festival of
bridge. Information from http://www.msoworld.com/
On his way to a salmon fishing trip with Ross Harper in Scotland
Geir Helgemo, the world’s number one player, will be competing in
the point a board and the Swiss Teams, whilst several foreign
players will be taking the opportunity to combine a football match
with a little bridge. The one session point a board teams is an
unusual event. Instead of Imping up with your teammates you either
win lose or draw the board with a difference of just ten points
being a win.
Here is a hand with Geir in action from the Yeh Brothers cup, the
invitational tournament held recently in China, which shows how good
his technique is:
Dealer South. North/South Vul. |
|
ª J 9 8 4 © J 6 ¨ 6 4 3 § A K 7 6 |
ª
2 © Q 4
3 ¨ A K 10 7 5
2 § Q 10 9 |
|
ª
Q 5 3 © 10 9
8 5 2 ¨ 98 § J 5 4 |
|
ª A K 10 7 6 © A K 7 ¨ Q J § 8 3 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
|
|
Helgemo |
|
|
|
1ª |
2¨ |
2ª |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
4ª |
All Pass |
|
Geir’s 3§ bid was asking
for help in the suit and it was easy for his partner to accept the
game try. The defense cashed the two top tricks in diamonds and
continued with the 10¨.
Geir ruffed this and cashed one top spade. He now led a club to
the K§, and returned to hand
with the K©. A second club
was now led to the A§ and now
he cashed the other top heart and trumped his last heart in dummy.
He now played a spade to the ten and spread his hand. He had already
counted West for six diamonds, three hearts, two clubs and one
spade, so even if the 10ª
lost to the Qª, West would
have no option but to give a ruff and discard.
The hand below looks relatively trivial, yet the decision at
trick two was to cost one team $18,000 dollars.
Dealer North. All Vul |
|
ª - © 9 7 6 4 ¨ A K 5 4 3 § J 8 7 6 |
ª
A J 10 7 3 ©
3 ¨ Q 10 9
8 § Q 4 2 |
|
ª
K 9 5 4 2 © J
8 5 ¨ J 7 2 § A 3 |
|
ª Q 8 6 © A K Q 10 2 ¨ 6 § K 10 9 5 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
Pass |
Pass |
1© |
1ª |
3¨1 |
3©2 |
4© |
4ª |
5© |
All Pass |
|
1. 3¨ showed 5+¨ and 4+© 2. 3© showed a good raise to 3ª
The bidding was exactly the same at both tables. Readers may be
interested in the two conventional bids. After passing, a jump in a
new suit shows a fit with partner and one’s own suit. In competitive
sequences it helps the partnership make high level decisions. The
bid of 3© (made by East)
shows a better hand than bidding 3ª.
North, with his void in spades, was correct to compete to 5© and this left West on lead. At
one table the Aª was led and
declarer had no problem making his contract. He ruffed a spade,
played a round of trumps, ruffed a second spade and drew trumps. He
now cashed the ace and king of diamonds throwing his last spade and
set up the clubs conceding two tricks.
At the other table the club lead was won by the ace, and a club
was returned. It was the moment of decision. Was the lead from §Q62 or was it a singleton?
Declarer guessed wrongly and played the ten, which was won by the
queen. He now suffered a club ruff to go one down and give victory
to the Italians by nine IMPs. Would you have got it
right? |