SWISS TEAMS DAY TWO
The last deal of the second Swiss match caused problems around
the room. By and large, the field found themselves unable to cash
out successfully on this hand –whatever contract they were
defending.
Board 16. Dealer West. E/W Vul. |
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♠
K 10 7 ♥ J 4 ♦ K 10 3 ♣ K Q J 7 4 |
♠ A 9 8 6
5 4 3 2 ♥ 9 ♦ 4 ♣ 10 5 3 |
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♠ Q
J ♥ A K Q 7 5 ♦ 9 8 6 2 ♣ 9 8 |
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♠
- ♥ 10 8 6 3 2 ♦ A Q J 7 5 ♣ A 6 2 |
Not every West felt obligated to open at unfavorable
vulnerability. When Geoff Wolfarth and Brian Senior held the E/W
cards Wolfarth passed as West and Senior did not come in over a weak
no-trump. Wolfarth doubled an artificial spade call, eventually
allowing Senior to have the pleasure of doubling 4♥, and subsequently 4NT. He led the ♠Q and Wolfarth carefully overtook to shift to
a heart, allowing Senior to cash out for down one. In the match
where John Holland was North he heard the auction start 3♠ - Pass – 4♠ -
double. He elected to bid 5♣ and the
defenders cashed two hearts but did not find the diamond ruff.
Neither did his teammates against a club contract – but they were
defending 6♣ on the same auction, where
North had found an ebullient leap to slam. Philippe Cronier as
North passed 4♠ doubled on the same
auction, the winning action since when the defence cash their three
minor suit winners they can simply establish a second trump trick by
leading a club, or could survive playing a diamond now. Declarer can
ruff and pitch his club on the top hearts, but when he finesses in
trumps, North wins and returns a diamond. West ruffs and can unblock
trumps, but then cannot get off dummy without promoting a trump for
the defence! Even +500 would not have been enough for Cronier
though. In the other room after a transfer preempt opening of 3♥x by West Phil King as North played 3NT and
East thought he had enough to double. On the lead of a top heart
East shifted to a spade – and that was -750! Paul Hackett and
Ross Harper bid the N/S cards as follows:
West |
North |
East |
South |
Pass |
1♣ |
1♥ |
2♦ |
2♠ |
3♦ |
Pass |
5♦ |
All pass |
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As you can see, they had at least managed to reach the minor suit
game with play. West led his singleton heart and East won and cashed
a second heart. Declarer could now ruff the spade shift and trump a
heart in dummy for his 11 th trick. Afterwards West claimed that his
partner could have set up a force by shifting to a spade at trick
two. However, Hackett had his answer ready; there are two ways to
make the contract on a spade shift. He could throw a heart away and
later arrange to discard his three remaining hearts on dummy’s
black-suit winners. Or, more artistically, he could ruff, draw
trumps, then run clubs and come down to a two-card ending in which
by leading the ♠K from dummy he could pin
the ♠J and force West to concede trick 13
to dummy’s ♠10!
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