Italy vs France
Bermuda Bowl - Round 12
By Patrick Jourdain
(Wales)
It was a packed VuGraph Hall for the match between the hosts and
Italy, European and Olympiad champions. Italy established the early
lead, helped by great play from Norberto Bocchi on this deal:
Board 7. Dealer South. All Vul.
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ª 9 2 © A 5 3 2 ¨ J 10 § J 9 8 5 3 |
ª 10 8 6 © 10 8 6 ¨ Q 6 4 2 § A 6 2 |
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ª A K 5 4 © Q 7 ¨ A 9 7 3 § K Q 7 |
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ª Q J 7 3 © K J 9 4 ¨ K 8 5 § 10
4 |
Open Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Duboin |
Multon |
Bocchi |
Quantin |
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|
|
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
2§* |
Pass |
2©* |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
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They say "the old ones are the best", and this proved the case
here. The side-screen showed a string of 3NTs failing by at least
one trick, the eventual outcome at the other table in this match.
(To digress: when the Closed Room falls behind the Open, the
audience does not get to see the auction from the Closed Room, and
there are no records of the VuGraph match in the Press Room, making
life difficult for the journalists. Memo to VuGraph Commentators,
please keep the auction slips, and when no longer needed, they
should join the other records in the Press Room.)
Abecassis Michel,
France |
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But Bocchi succeeded. How did it happen? The defence have
four hearts to cash, a trick outside and at least two chances
to make them. It certainly did no harm to declarer that
Quantin led a low spade, and Bocchi successfully put up the
ten, but that does not solve the main problem: the defence
still have four hearts and an outside trick to make.
At trick two Bocchi boldly led a low heart off dummy to the
queen! The effect was as intended. Quantin won the king and
persisted with a high spade. Bocchi won, led a low diamond to
the queen, and played ace and another to leave South on lead.
A warning bell might have rung when declarer failed to
continue the suit he had tackled first, but South had his
defence planned and continued with a third spade. Bocchi
promptly claimed his game. 12 IMPs to
Italy. |
In France it is popular to use Two Diamonds as an artificial
game-force with ace-showing responses. This method has a snag that
the players only start bidding their suits at an awkwardly high
level. That proved the key point on Board 15. South, at adverse
vulnerability, held: ª Q 2
© A J 10 8 7 ¨ Q 9 8 5 § 6 5
On VuGraph North opened the game-forcing Two Diamonds and South
bid Two Spades to show one ace. North now rebid a natural Three
Spades. What would you choose to bid on the South cards?
If you bid a simple Four Spades you will not have shown your
useful values other than the ace of hearts. Perhaps Four Hearts
would be natural. Anyway, Quantin felt compelled to bid Five Spades.
This cut out any chance of an appropriate asking bid from Multon,
who held:
ª A K J 9 7 3 © Q 3 ¨ None § A
K Q J 3
He had no idea whether his side should be in Five, Six or Seven.
Having plenty to spare he decided to leap to Seven, hoping to escape
a heart lead when partner's values were in diamonds rather than
hearts.
This was the full deal:
Board 15. Dealer South. N/S Vul.
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ª A K J 9 7 3 © Q 3 ¨ - § A K Q J 3 |
ª 10 5 © K 4 2 ¨ K J 7 6 4 § 10 8 4 |
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ª 8 6 4 © 9 6 5 ¨ A 10 3 2 § 9 7 2 |
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ª Q 2 © A J 10 8 7 ¨ Q 9 8 5 § 6 5 |
As you can see the grand slam was on a finesse. This is not
terrible odds provided the other table can be guaranteed to be in at
least Six (yes, Italy had reached a boring Six Spades). You gain 13
IMPs if the finesse is right and lose 17 IMPs if it is wrong. It was
not the day for France. The finesse lost and the match was out of
reach. At the end Italy had won by 83-30 or 25-5 in VPs.
P.S. Perhaps I might take the chance to mention the oldest member
of the VuGraph audience. This surely must be Albert Benjamin, now a
magnificent 92. (I recall the European Championships eight years
ago, walking back to a hotel in Menton with Albert, when he told me
it would have to be his last major championship due to his great
age.) Benjamin Acol combines weak twos in the majors with two strong
openings: Two Diamonds being the artificial game force, as with
French methods, but with natural responses.
Benjamin Acol was popular early on, then lost some adherents with
people saying "Even Albert himself has given it up". But in recent
years it has had something of a revival, and may even be the
most-used system in British tournament bridge.
Natural responses to Two Diamonds (with the Two
Heart relay being used on most occasions) certainly work better on
this deal, because of the space saved in the auction. It starts:
2¨-2©-2ª-3ª-4§-4©-4NT
etc. Despite the void, North can ask for keycards knowing that when
South shows one it is the ace of hearts. An enquiry for the queen of
trumps produces the answer "Yes, but no outside king". And North
settles for the small slam. |