French Toast
By Patrick Jourdain (
Wales)
To be squeezed by a pair of beautiful Croatian girls will be most
male juniors’ dream, but the French Chauvel on this deal from the
third round didn’t appear to enjoy the experience:
Board 12. Dealer West. N/S Vul. |
|
♠
10 4 ♥ 10 8 6 ♦ A 10 9 ♣ J 9 8 3 2 |
♠ A K J
5 ♥ K J 4 ♦ Q J 8 ♣ 7 5 4 |
|
♠ 9 6
2 ♥ 9 7 5 ♦ 7 5 4 3 ♣ K Q 6 |
|
♠
Q 8 7 3 ♥ A Q 3
2 ♦ K 6
2 ♣ A 10 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Chauvel |
Kulovic-Probst |
Malorme |
Martinovic |
1NT |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble |
All Pass |
|
|
|
Nicolas Chauvel opened a strong notrump on the West cards and was
doubled by Slavica Martinovic, sitting South. Sandra Kulovic-Probst,
(the deal was reported by her husband, Richard), led a low club.
Double-dummy declarer does best to play low from dummy, thereby
blocking the run of the suit, but it was normal enough to put up the
king. This was beaten by the ace and South’s ten of clubs was
overtaken by North’s jack. Planning to exit later with a club,
declarer won the second trick to take the spade finesse. He cashed
two more spades but North threw a heart on the third round. Now
declarer exited with his club. North cashed two more clubs,
extracting a spade and a heart from declarer, and then switched to a
low diamond (a heart also works, but not a high diamond). South won
the king of diamonds and then the queen of spades squeezed declarer
in the red suits. The defence had come to four clubs, a spade, three
top red winners, and another trick from the squeeze. Declarer had
made only three spades and a club, for 500 to Croatia. There was
useful swing to Croatia but France won the match 17-13.
Disaster Corner
By Jean-Francois Jourdain (
Belgium)
The Belgian rookie, Benoit Guiot made a real entry in the
competition to be the player who wasted the most points on one
single deal, if you look at this disaster against Italy on the very
last board. Yet, after having going down at the very first deal in 3
NT when ignoring two tricks in dummy, he ended the Round 4 Juniors
match just as he had begun it.
Deal 20. Dealer West. All Vul. |
|
♠
K 10 6 3 ♥ 4 ♦ K Q 5 4 3 ♣ A 10 8 |
♠ J
5 ♥ A K Q J 8 5 ♦ 8 ♣ J 7 5 2 |
|
♠ Q 7
2 ♥ 7 6 3 ♦ A 7 2 ♣ Q 9 4 3 |
|
♠
A 9 8 4 ♥ 10 9 2 ♦ J 10 9 6 ♣ K 6 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
1♥ |
Dble |
2♣(i) |
2♠ |
4♥ |
All Pass |
|
|
As we already have seen in Daily Bulletin 3, a pass is not really
possible in a team game when your opponents bid 4♥ voluntarily, since not so many cards are
required by partner to have a good save, or even win the contract
yourself. After all, something as little as ♠A9xx ♥xxx ♦Jxx ♣Kxx can be enough – so why not try ? When he
passed without any hesitation, a first major swing opportunity was
missed since at the other table the Italians scored only
+200. Defending against 4♥ seems
simply routine, since East/West can never get rid of their four
black losers. Or maybe, well? Yes, welcome to the Disaster
Corner! Benguigui, as we nicknamed him in Belgium, led the ♠6. Alexandre Hubert took the ace and thought a
while about his switch. He came to the conclusion that the best
chance was his partner to have the ♣A and
consequently played the ♣K at trick two.
When that held, he might have thought everything was all right, but
not yet! If he had been cautious, he should now have played the
♠4, after which his partner could not do
anything wrong any more. But he played a second club, and North
concluded that a second spade was not to be cashed. For some reason
I still do not understand, he seemed not interested to give his
partner a club ruff, and switched to the ♦K. Disaster was looming. The Italian
player, Andrea Boldrini now proceeded to play all his trumps and his
remaining clubs, in the hope something would happen. When South,
apparently upset at not having got his ruff, fell asleep and forgot
to pitch as soon as possible the ♦J on the table, which would have clearly solved all
problems, Benguigui had a difficult guess on the penultimate trick.
As he remained convinced that his partner held five spades from the
beginning, he let the ♠K go and Italy
scored another 620, enough to win the match by 25-1
VPs. |