USA II vs Germany - Venice
Cup - Round 4
In any contest, it seems that spectators usually prefer a
high-scoring affair. Those who were not especially picky about
high-quality play were well pleased with the efforts of Germany and
USA II in the Venice Cup in Tuesday's first Vugraph match. In a
contest which featured 13 double-digit swings in 20 boards, USA II
emerged with an 87-80 win. Just when it seemed that USA II had
put the match out of reach, Germany stormed back to actually take
the lead on the penultimate deal before suffering a 14-IMP loss on
the final board. Germany started as though they were the ones
headed for a rout, as Mildred Breed and Shawn Quinn had a bidding
accident on Board 2 for the first of the double-digit swings.
Board 2. Dealer East. N/S Vul.
|
|
ª K Q 7 5 3 2 © Q 6 ¨ J 10 3 2 § 7 |
ª J 10 © A 8 4 2 ¨ A 8 § 10 6 4 3 2 |
|
ª A 8 6 © 10 9 7 3 ¨ K 6 4 § K 9 8 |
|
ª 9 4 © K J 5 ¨ Q 9 7 5 § A Q J 5 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von
Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
|
|
1NT (1) |
Pass |
Pass |
2ª (2) |
Pass |
3NT |
Dble |
4ª |
Dble |
All Pass |
10-12 |
|
Meant as natural but Alerted by South as showing one minor
suit. Clearly the Americans were overboard, and the Germans were
quick to apply the ax. Sabine Auken led the heart nine to her
partner's ace, and von Arnim played the diamond ace and a diamond to
Auken's king for a ruff. The defense still had the trump ace to
come. That was 500 to Germany and a 12-IMP swing after Barbara
Hackett and Katrin Farwig stopped in Two Spades with the North-South
card at the other table. USA II wasted no time striking back.
Board 3. Dealer South. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª 10 8 7 © K 10 2 ¨ A K 6 5 § Q 5 4 |
ª K 6 5 © A J 7 4 ¨ 10 8 7 2 § 3 2 |
|
ª Q J 9 3 2 © 8 5 ¨ Q J 3 § 9 8 6 |
|
ª A 4 © Q 9 6 3 ¨ 9 4 § A K J 10 7 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
|
|
|
1NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
Von Arnim started with a low heart, which solved that suit for
declarer and made plus 460 a trivial matter. Things were different
at the other table.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Klar |
Hackett |
Schulle |
Farwig |
|
|
|
1§ |
Pass |
1¨ |
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
|
Warned by South's heart bid, Klar found the killing spade lead
from the West hand, dooming declarer, could hold up the spade ace
just once, to down one. That was 11 IMPs to USA II. Germany
slipped up on the next deal to hand USA II another big swing.
Board 4. Dealer West. Both Vul.
|
|
ª K Q 10 9 3 © A K Q 9 ¨ A J § J 3 |
ª A 4 © 10 5 4 ¨ K 10 9 8 4 § 10 8 4 |
|
ª 8 7 5 © 7 6 3 2 ¨ 6 5 3 § 9 6 5 |
|
ª J 6 2 © J 8 ¨ Q 7 2 § A K Q 7 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5¨
(1) |
Dble |
6ª |
All Pass |
|
(1) One or four key cards.
Auken led a diamond and Breed was soon claiming plus 1430. At the
other table, Hackett and Farwig dropped the ball.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Klar |
Hackett |
Schulle |
Farwig |
Pass |
2¨
(1) |
Pass |
2©
(2) |
Pass |
2NT (3) |
Pass |
3§
(4) |
Pass |
3NT (5) |
Pass |
4NT |
All Pass |
|
|
|
(1) Weak two-bid in a major or a strong balanced hand. (2) To
play if North has the weak bid. (3) 20-22 balanced. (4)
Majors? (5) Both. Farwig's invitational 4NT seems much too
conservative, particularly with the aggressive Breed and Quinn at
the other table. Twelve tricks in notrump were easy, but it was
still 12 IMPs away.
On this deal, Quinn survived an error in the play to hold the
team's loss to 1 IMP.
Board 6. Dealer East. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª A Q 6 4 2 © K 9 ¨ K 10 6 § A K 4 |
ª 10 9 8 5 © A Q 7 3 2 ¨ 5 4 § Q 9 |
|
ª J 7 © J 10 8 ¨ Q 9 3 2 § J 10 8 5 |
|
ª K 3 © 6 5 4 ¨ A J 8 7 § 7 6 3 2 |
In the closed room, Hackett brought home 10 tricks in Three
Notrump with the aid of a successful diamond guess. Quinn also made
it, but only just.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
|
|
|
Pass Pass |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
|
Von Arnim led a low heart, and Quinn cleared the first hurdle by
putting up the king. When she played a spade from dummy, Auken put
in the jack. Quinn took the king and played a spade to dummy, Von
Arnim following with the ten. It was apparent the spade suit was not
breaking and, unwilling to try to guess the diamond queen, Quinn
exited dummy with the heart nine. Auken won the heart 10 and played
a third round to her partner's hand. On the run of the hearts, dummy
discarded down to the king and a low diamond plus the top two clubs.
This was the position after Von Arnim cashed her heart winners:
|
ª Q 6 © - ¨ K 6 § A K |
ª 9 8 © - ¨ 5 4 § Q 9 |
|
ª - © - ¨ Q 9 3 § J 10 8 |
|
ª - © - ¨ A J 8 § 7 6 3 |
Von Arnim exited with a diamond, taken by Quinn with dummy's
king. If she had cashed dummy's clubs first, the play of the spade
queen would have squeezed Auken in an ending that Quinn could not
misguess. As it was, she cashed the spade queen first and had to
decide which minor-suit card to throw from her hand. She chose the
diamond jack, which was correct, and she scored up the
game. After that 1-IMP loss, the Americans followed with 39
unanswered IMPs on the next four boards. This one typified Germany's
troubles.
Board 9. Dealer North. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª K 6 © J 8 2 ¨ 8 3 2 § J 10 6 4 3 |
ª Q 8 7 4 © A K 4 ¨ Q 7 § A K Q 7 |
|
ª A 9 5 © 10 9 7 6 5 ¨ K 10 6 5 § 8 |
|
ª J 10 3 2 © Q 3 ¨ A J 9 4 § 9 5 2 |
In the closed room, Klar opened the West hand Two Notrump and
soon found herself in Four Hearts, which she had no trouble bringing
in for plus 620. In the open room, again the auction went awry, this
time for the Germans.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
|
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
1§
(1) |
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
3§
(2) |
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
4ª |
Pass |
5© |
All Pass |
|
|
(1) Strong. (2) Indicating a 3-5-4-1 pattern with 8-9
high-card points. Von Arnim meant Four Hearts as a signoff, but
Auken took it as asking for key cards and the partnership was too
high. Auken had a chance for 11 tricks on Quinn's opening lead of a
low spade, but Auken put up dummy's queen and could do no better
than 10 tricks and minus 100. Another 12 IMPs to USA II. At the
halfway point, the Americans led 65-13. Germany struck back on
the first board of the second half when Hackett-Farwig barreled into
a cold Six Diamonds after a light opening by Farwig while Quinn and
Breed had to cope with interference from Auken and stopped in a
diamond game. That was 11 IMPs to Germany, and Von Arnim helped her
side to another 12 IMPs with brilliant play to land a slam on the
next deal.
Board 12. Dealer West. N/S Vul.
|
|
ª K 10 5 2 © Q 9 6 2 ¨ Q 10 5 § Q 6 |
ª 3 © A J 10 5 3 ¨ A J 7 4 § 10 8 3 |
|
ª A J 9 8 7 © K 8 7 ¨ 3 § A K 5 2 |
|
ª Q 6 4 © 4 ¨ K 9 8 6 2 § J 9 7 4 |
Open Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Klar |
Hackett |
Schulle |
Farwig |
Pass |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
4© |
All Pass |
Hackett led a trump and declarer could do no better than 11
tricks. At the other table, the Germans had higher ambitions.
Closed Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
1© |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
4ª |
Pass |
5¨ |
Pass |
6© |
All Pass |
Breed didn't find the killing trump lead - she started a sneaky
low club - but Von Arnim still had to play perfectly to land the
ambitious slam. She considered the contract for a long time before
playing to trick one, but she was flawless from there: Club ace,
spade ace, spade ruff, diamond ace, diamond ruff, spade ruff,
diamond ruff, club king, spade ruff, diamond ruff, followed by a
club from dummy. North, down to all trumps, was forced to ruff her
partner's club winner and lead into von Arnim's heart tenace. Twelve
tricks and 11 IMPs Germany. Germany earned another 10 IMPs with a
game swing on Board 13, closing to within 20 IMPs. After the match's
only push and a small swing, Germany scored another major gain.
Board 16. Dealer West. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª Q 10 6 © Q J 10 6 2 ¨ 9 5 3 § J 3 |
ª 8 5 3 © 9 7 ¨ A K Q J 4 § K 9 8 |
|
ª K J © A K 8 4 ¨ 7 6 § Q 7 6 5 4 |
|
ª A 9 7 4 2 © 5 3 ¨ 10 8 2 § A 10 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Klar |
Hackett |
Schulle |
Farwig |
1¨ |
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
Hackett led the heart queen, taken in dummy. Klar played a club
to the king, which held, then she misguessed spades by playing to
the king. From there, Klar had no way to scramble a ninth trick and
she finished at minus 50. It went differently in the Vugraph
room.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
1¨ |
Pass |
1© |
1ª |
Pass |
2ª |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
Quinn led a low spade to the three, queen and king. When Auken
tried to sneak a club through, Quinn was alert and grabbed the ace.
After Breed raised her spades, Quinn knew that declarer's jack was
dropping, so she put the spade ace on the table. Unfortunately for
their side, Breed failed to unblock the spade 10 and Auken was home
with an overtrick. That was 12 more IMPs to Germany, now down only
11. Germany pulled to within 3 IMPs when Breed and Quinn got too
high on this deal.
Board 18. Dealer East. N/S Vul.
|
|
ª A 9 7 6 5 4 3 © A K ¨ 5 § K 4 3 |
ª J 8 2 © 9 8 6 5 3 ¨ 9 6 2 § J 7 |
|
ª - © Q 4 2 ¨ Q J 8 7 3 § A Q 10 5 2 |
|
ª K Q 10 © J 10 7 ¨ A K 10 4 § 9 8
6 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Klar |
Hackett |
Schulle |
Farwig |
|
|
1¨ |
Pass |
Pass |
1ª |
2§ |
2¨ |
Pass |
4ª |
All Pass |
|
Schulle led the diamond queen and Hackett was soon claiming her
contract with an overtrick. That was good for Germany because of
what happened at the other table.
West |
North |
East |
South |
Von Arnim |
Breed |
Auken |
Quinn |
|
|
1¨ |
Dble |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
2ª |
Pass |
4NT |
Pass |
5ª |
Pass |
6ª |
All Pass |
|
Breed, with seven-card support for partner, can be forgiven for
her enthusiasm opposite partner's takeout double. As long as Von
Arnim didn't lead a major, Quinn had no chance for 12 tricks.
Indeed, Von Arnim started with partner's suit, breaking up the
squeeze Auken was going to be subjected to on a major-suit lead.
There was no hope for the slam after that and Quinn duly went down
one as Germany closed to within 3 IMPs after trailing by more than
50. Germany took the lead with a game swing on the penultimate
board, but the largest swing of the match - 14 IMPs - went against
them on the final board. In the open room, Quinn and Breed found
their way to 4NT but made it on power. At the other table, Hackett
and Farwig reached a contract of Six Clubs that had plays, but
Farwig finished down three after a series of poor guesses. It is
likely that, considering all that went on in the wild match, that
either side could feel fortunate it wasn't
worse. |