Operation Successful – Both
Patients Died
By Barry Rigal
Eldad Ginossar of Israel was full of praise for Thomas Bessis’s
attempts to make consecutive game contracts on two deals from the
Round 10 Juniors match between Israel and France.
Board 14. Dealer East. None Vul.
|
|
♠
J 10 8 3 ♥ J 8 5 ♦ J 10 9 2 ♣ 8 4 |
♠ A K Q
9 ♥ Q 10 9 4 ♦ A K 7 ♣ 10 5 |
|
♠ 7 6
2 ♥ A ♦ Q 8 6 5 4 ♣ K 7 6 2 |
|
♠
5 4 ♥ K 7 6 3 2 ♦ 3 ♣ A Q J 9 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Gaviard |
Ginossar |
Bessis |
Reshef |
|
|
Pass |
2♥ |
Dble |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
Ophir Reshef, having shown a limited two-suiter with his 2♥ opening bid, led the jack of clubs against
3NT, zero or two higher. Bessis won the ♣K and cashed the ace and king of diamonds,
getting the bad news. Now he tried the effect of exiting with the
ten of clubs to South’s queen! Had Reshef taken all his club
winners, North would have been squeezed in spades and diamonds, but
Reshef could see the danger and carefully cashed only three clubs,
North pitching an encouraging heart. Reshef switched to a low heart,
dropping declarer’s bare ace, and Bessis cashed two top spades,
hoping to drop an honour from South so that North could be endplayed
with the fourth diamond to lead into the ♠Q9. When that too failed, he had to go one
down. But very well played and also well defended. Incidentally,
had South actually held a doubleton spade honour, he would have had
to cash one less club before finding the heart play. Now North will
still have a second heart with which to get off lead should declarer
try for the endplay and South will win a heart and his remaining
club tricks.
Board 15. Dealer South. N/S Vul.
|
|
♠
10 9 7 5 ♥ J ♦ 9 8 5 3 ♣ K Q 5 4 |
♠ 8 4
3 ♥ K Q 8 5 3 2 ♦ J 4 ♣ A 10 |
|
♠ A K Q J
6 ♥ 7 ♦ K 7 2 ♣ J 8 7 6 |
|
♠
2 ♥ A 10 9 6 4 ♦ A Q 10 6 ♣ 9 3 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Gaviard |
Ginossar |
Bessis |
Reshef |
|
|
|
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
1♠ |
Dble |
Rdbl |
1NT |
Dble |
Pass |
Pass |
Rdbl |
Pass |
2♣ |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble |
Rdbl |
Pass |
2♦ |
Pass |
Pass |
2♠ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3♠ |
Pass |
4♠ |
All Pass |
Two No Trump would have made, but Gaviard tried to play the known
five-three spade fit and Bessis raised himself to game. Reshef,
suspecting that his partner was probably 4-1-4-4 from the auction,
cashed the ace of hearts then shifted to a club, ducked to the
queen. Back came a trump and Bessis, who did not know that North had
four spades, hoped that he might be 4-2-3-4, and ran the spade
switch to dummy’s eight! Unlucky – Bessis had his entry to dummy but
the five-one heart split was too much for him. Had hearts divided
four-two, he could have ruffed a heart, drawn trumps, then used the
ace of clubs as an entry to run the hearts.
Board 8. Dealer West. None Vul. |
|
♠
K Q J ♥ A K 10 6 5
4 ♦ A K
4 ♣ 7 |
♠ 5
2 ♥ 7 3 2 ♦ J 3 ♣ K J 9 5 3 2 |
|
♠ A 9 8 7
6 ♥ Q 9 8 ♦ Q 5 2 ♣ A 6 |
|
♠
10 4 3 ♥ J ♦ 10 9 8 7 6 ♣ Q 10 8 4 |
Thomas Bessis was also the hero of this deal earlier in the
match. After a strong and artificial 2♣
opening, Ginossar declared 4♥ on the lead
of the two of diamonds. He won in hand and led a low. Bessis took
the ♥Q and got out with a heart to
declarer. Ginossar drew another round of trumps then played the
king of spades so Bessis took the ace and returned a spade. Ginossar
ran his winners to come down to:
|
|
♠
- ♥ 4 ♦ A 4 ♣ 7 |
♠
- ♥ - ♦ 3 ♣ K J 5 |
|
♠
- ♥ - ♦ Q 5 ♣ A 4 |
|
♠
- ♥ - ♦ 10 9 ♣ Q 10 |
When the last heart was cashed, Bessis carefully threw the ace of
clubs to avoid the endplay, so the contract was one down.
Deep Finesse
By Barry Rigal
Deep Finesse occasionally throws up intriguing play problems.
When you discover that a certain contract is laydown, you often move
on and think nothing more about it. But when DF tells you a contract
will always make, and the defenders seem to have the upper hand, you
need to work out why there is no defence. Consider Deal
14 from Round 8, where 4♥ is described as
unbeatable. It looks easy; you play to ruff two club sin the South
hand, and yet…
Board 14. Dealer East. None Vul.
|
|
♠
A ♥ K 7 5 4 3 ♦ K J 5 ♣ 10 5 3 2 |
♠ K J 9
7 ♥ 6 ♦ 10 8 7 4 2 ♣ K J 8 |
|
♠ Q 10
8 ♥ Q J 10 8 ♦ 6 3 ♣ Q 9 6 4 |
|
♠
6 5 4 3 2 ♥ A 9
2 ♦ A Q
9 ♣ A 7 |
Imagine the contract declared by South after a transfer auction,
though who is declarer is not so important, and West leads his
singleton trump. It appears to be impossible to take the ruffs.
However, as David Greenwood pointed out, the contract can be made.
Declarer wins the heart in hand, crosses to the ace of spades
and leads a low club towards his ♣A7.
East must go in with the nine, else declarer can duck to West, who
has no second trump to lead. So South wins the ♣A and West must unblock the jack. But when
declarer leads a second club and West plays the eight, dummy ducks
and East has to overtake to play a trump. Declarer wins the ♥K, ruffs a club and, when the king falls, the
ten is high so that no second ruff is required. So much for that,
but what if the club layout was:
|
♣ 10 5 3 2 |
♣ K J
4 |
|
♣ Q 9
8 6 |
|
♣ A 7 |
Now West could unblock the jack under the ace and East win the
second round without sacrificing a trick in the suit. So, can the
contract still be made? Again, the answer is yes. Declarer needs
to set up the fifth spade instead. He wins the king of hearts at
trick one, unblocks the ♠A and ducks a
club to East. Declarer wins the heart return in hand and ruffs two
spades in hand, crossing back to via top diamonds. When he ruffs the
fourth spade in dummy, East can over-ruff and draw the last trump,
but declarer has a club, diamond and spade for the last three
tricks, scoring two spades, two spade ruffs, two hearts, a club and
three diamonds. |