Seniors, Qualification
Round 3:
Priday vs Resta (and the
resta)
by Ace Ventura
In the Seniors Teams Qualification Priday ( England) and Resta (
Italy) after two matches were the top teams in Group A, and it
seemed sensible for us to sit down to watch them to meet in the
third round. We expected to see some nice bridge due to the
experienced assemble. First let’s see if you can solve this
defence.
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♠
5 4 ♥ J 10 8 5 3 ♦ 8 7 5 3 ♣ A J |
♠ Q J
7 ♥ A 9 4 ♦ A K Q 5 ♣ 10 7 6 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Gordon |
Longinotti |
Hiron |
Maci |
|
Pass |
1♣ |
1♠ |
2♦ |
Pass |
3♣ |
Pass |
3♥ |
Pass |
3NT |
Pass |
4♣ |
Pass |
4♥ |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5♠ |
Pass |
6♣ |
All Pass |
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5♠ shows two aces and the queen of
clubs. South leads a club to your ace. What next? The answer will
appear later on in the article. Priday got off to a flying start
immediately due to a big swing on the first board:
Board 17. Dealer North. None Vul.
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♠
5 4 ♥ J 10 8 5 3 ♦ 8 7 5 3 ♣ A J |
♠ Q J
7 ♥ A 9 4 ♦ A K Q 5 ♣ 10 7 6 |
|
♠ A 10
2 ♥ K 7 2 ♦ 4 ♣ K Q 9 8 5 2 |
|
♠
K 9 8 6 3 ♥ Q 6 ♦ J 10 9 6 ♣ 4 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
De Falco |
T. Priday |
Resta |
V. Priday |
|
Pass |
2♣ |
Pass |
2♦ |
Pass |
2♥ |
Pass |
2♠ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
6♣ |
All Pass |
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West |
North |
East |
South |
Gordon |
Longinotti |
Hiron |
Maci |
|
Pass |
1♣ |
1♠ |
2♦ |
Pass |
3♣ |
Pass |
3♥ |
Pass |
3NT |
Pass |
4♣ |
Pass |
4♥ |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5♠ |
Pass |
6♣ |
All Pass |
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In the Open Room Guido Resta opened 2♣
Precision-style, 2♦ was
relay and 2♥ showed a minimum with clubs
and hearts or any strong hand with clubs. 2♠ just asked for more information and 2NT now,
according the Italians conventions, promised 15-16 HCPs and two key
cards outside clubs so Dano de Falco expected a better hand from
East and simply jumped to 6♣. Vivian
Priday’s lead, the jack of diamonds, was won in dummy and next came
a club to the jack and king. Tony Priday won the next trick with the
trump ace and played a spade. Resta had only the finesse to hope for
and when it did not succeed he was down one. At the other table,
Maureen Hiron faced the same contract and she got a club lead to the
ace. North didn’t see any reason not to switch to a spade, his
partner’s suit. A finesse was not an option here, otherwise it would
have been a suicidal overcall. Hiron took the ace, cashed a top
club, ace and king of hearts, and then drew trumps to produce this
ending:
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♠
- ♥ J ♦ 8 7 5 3 ♣ - |
♠
- ♥ 9 ♦ A K Q 5 ♣ - |
|
♠ 10
2 ♥ 7 ♦ 4 ♣ 5 |
|
♠
K ♥ - ♦ J 10 9 6 ♣ - |
Neither defender could hold four diamonds on the last club –
double squeeze fait accomplit; +920 and that was 14 IMPs to
Priday. The defence could have broke the possibilities for the
squeeze by either leading a diamond, as Vivian Priday did in the
Open Room, or play a diamond after winning the trump ace. The
next board was flat but then another small slam was on the
cards.
Board 19. Dealer South. E/W Vul.
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♠
- ♥ J 9 6 ♦ K 9 6 ♣ A K Q 10 9 5 4 |
♠ J 9
4 ♥ A Q 10 5 4 ♦ 8 4 2 ♣ 8 3 |
|
♠ A 10 8 7
6 3 ♥ 8 3 2 ♦ 10 7 ♣ J 6 |
|
♠
K Q 5 2 ♥ K 7 ♦ A Q J 5 3 ♣ 7 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
De Falco |
T. Priday |
Resta |
V. Priday |
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1NT |
Pass |
3♣ |
Pass |
3NT |
Pass |
4♣ |
Pass |
4♦ |
Pass |
4♠ |
Dble |
Pass |
Pass |
6♣ |
All Pass |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Gordon |
Longinotti |
Hiron |
Maci |
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1♦ |
Pass |
2♣ |
Pass |
2♠ |
Pass |
3♣ |
Pass |
3♥ |
Dble |
4♦ |
Pass |
4♥ |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5♦ |
All Pass |
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With South as declarer a small slam can make in either minor, but
neither pair had the methods. Vivian Priday opened 1NT and 3♣ was game-forcing with a number of clubs. The
club-bid covered the weak spot in Vivian’s hand so she tried 3NT.
Tony’s 4♣ was a slam-try, 4♦ and 4♠ were cue-bids. Resta’s double was as little
as it needed to disturb North-South’s bidding-sequence. There was no
agreement of what South’s pass over the double showed so North was
left to decide what to do. Since it was uncertain if South held a
heart-stopper, North might have tried another move than a direct
6♣. A redouble might have given South the
chance to draw the break and stop in game. Resta had all the
information he needed and it was not too difficult for him to lead a
heart; de Falco could win the first two tricks, just enough to
defeat the slam. In the Closed Room Longinotti/Maci were on their
way to finding 6♦.
2♣ forced to game with clubs and 3♥ searched for a no trump-game. When Enrico
Longinotti showed some diamond support the way to the small slam was
open. 4♥ from Giovanni Maci was a cuebid
and 4NT asked for aces. When Longinotti faced one ace only it could
be the ace of spades, so he passed. Declarer took all tricks on a
spade lead; +440 and 10 IMPs to the Italians. The match was quite
close but not necessarily well played and with two more boards to go
Priday was in the lead by 37-25 IMPs. This was the exciting
penultimate board:
Board 31. Dealer South. N/S Vul.
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♠
A 9 6 2 ♥ 10 7 4
2 ♦ K 9
8 ♣ 8 7 |
♠ K J
4 ♥ 8 3 ♦ Q J 10 7 5 4 ♣ 10 9 |
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♠
5 ♥ A K Q J 9 6
5 ♦ 3
2 ♣ J 5 2 |
|
♠
Q 10 8 7 3 ♥ - ♦ A 6 ♣ A K Q 6 4 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
De Falco |
T. Priday |
Resta |
V. Priday |
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1♣ |
Pass |
1♥ |
4♥ |
All Pass (!) |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Gordon |
Longinotti |
Hiron |
Maci |
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2♣ |
3♦ |
Dble |
4♥ |
4♠ |
All Pass |
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In the Open Room South judged poorly not to take action over
East’s 4♥ and Resta therefore was let to
play there undoubled. 4♥ was doomed to go
down of course, but three down for –150 was a cheap sacrifice for
EW. NS reached 4♠ in the other room
without any problems; +650 and a lucky recovery of 11 IMPs by Resta.
The last board of the set was a push, but a quite extraordinary
one when Longinotti/Maci went two down in 6♣ missing the ace and king of trumps and the
Pridays only managed to take seven tricks in 3NT. That gave us the
final score of 37-36 in Priday’s favour, 15-15 converted into
VPs. In Qualifying Group B the British team Jourdain won heavily
25-4 against the Polish squad Szenberg. On board 31 (see the diagram
above) Jourdain gained 17 IMPs.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Antas |
Hirst |
Kaczanowski |
Jourdain |
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1♣ |
3♦ |
Dble |
4♥ |
6♠ |
All Pass |
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Jourdain could afford one but not two spade losers. After a
diamond lead, he was inclined to place East with solid hearts and so
West with the king of spades. He won in hand to lead the queen of
spades for +1430. Almost the same auction was reported from the
other table:
West |
North |
East |
South |
Luck |
Szenberg |
Goldenfield |
Mitaszewski |
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1♠ |
3♦ |
3♠ |
4♥ |
6♠ |
All Pass |
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Here the declarer ruffed the heart lead and then played the trump
ace – one down. In the same group Hollman secured a big win over
Euro-Agro thanks to the very same board.
West |
North |
East |
South |
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Baze |
|
Hollman |
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1♣ |
Pass |
1♥ |
4♥ |
Pass |
4♠ |
Dble |
5♥ |
6♠ |
Dble |
All Pass |
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4♥ was described as spades to Hollman
as South and while awaiting the next move from EW he passed. When
Baze could produce a double of 4♠ East’s
5♥ call exposed his hand, so Hollman
found a sensible bid: 6♠. West’s double
helped declarer to solve the spade suit successfully; NS +1660. That
was worth 14 IMPs for Hollman & Co when 5♠ was just made at the other table.
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