Asking for Tens
By Patrick Jourdain
(Wales)
Glenn Grotheim, of the Norwegian team, is inventor of the Viking
Club. It has a sophisticated relay method. On the deal below from
their Round Robin match against Brazil it got as far as locating
which jack partner held.
"Have you ever found about tens?", I enquired, attempting a
put-down. "No," replied a crestfallen Glenn, but he had a thoughtful
look, so the next version of the system may well remedy that
defect.
"What was the swing on the board?" "They didn't know about the
jack of clubs," he replied, "so had to settle for Seven Diamonds. We
were able to bid Seven Notrumps with confidence. Still it was a lot
of hard work for 2 IMPs."
Bermuda Bowl Round robin Round 10
Norway vs Brazil
Board 14. Dealer East. None Vul.
|
|
ª A Q 7 4 © A Q 3 ¨ K Q J 8 § A 8 |
ª 9 3 © J 10 9 8 4 ¨ 5 4 § 10 9 7 3 |
|
ª J 6 5 2 © K 7 6 5 ¨ 7 6 3 § 5 4 |
|
ª K 10 8 © 2 ¨ A 10 9 2 § K Q J 6 2 |
South |
North |
Glenn Grotheim |
Terje Aa |
1¨ (11-15 HCP, 1+ ¨s) |
1© (Nat or any Game force) |
2§ (both minors, at least 9 cards) |
2¨ (game-forcing relay) |
2© (4¨ - 5§) |
2ª (relay for exact shape) |
3© (3-1-4-5 shape) |
3ª (relay for aces) |
3NT (one ace) |
4§ (relay for number of kings) |
4ª (2 kings of the same colour) |
4NT (relay for
queens) |
5¨ (1 queen) |
5© (relay for which queen) |
5ª (§Q) |
5NT (relay for jacks) |
6¨ (1 jack) |
6© (relay for which jack) |
6ª (§J) |
7NT (we forgot to cover
tens) |
Pass |
|
If this has inspired you to investigate further, check the
website showing the full system:
www.vikingclub.net
Polish Power Play
Poland is in ominously good form. Here are two examples of how
they score points.
In Round 6 they faced Egypt the surprise team that so nearly
qualified.
Board 15. Dealer South. N/S Vul.
|
|
ª 10 8 6 © A Q 10 7 2 ¨ A Q 10 5 § 10 |
ª 7 © J 5 4 3 ¨ J 6 2 § K Q J 8 2 |
|
ª Q 5 4 3 2 © K 8 ¨ K 7 4 § 9 5 3 |
|
ª A K J 9 © 9 6 ¨ 9 8 3 § A 7 6 4 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Zmudzinski |
|
Balicki |
|
|
|
|
1§ |
Pass |
1© |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
Adam Zmudzinski led the king of clubs. Looking at the array
of points in his own hand, Balicki realised that his partner could
hardly have an entry outside the club suit. Setting a trap, Balicki
played the nine. In order of priority, that was discouraging, suit
preference or from an odd number. Declarer, believing that with the
singleton ten visible in dummy East would encourage with three clubs
to the nine, was taken in and fatally won the second club.
In Round 16 Poland faced Brazil.
Board 10. Dealer East. All Vul.
|
|
ª Q 10 8 6 4 © Q 9 8 3 ¨ 8 3 § K 5 |
ª A J 7 © A 4 2 ¨ A Q J 9 6 § 9 2 |
|
ª K 5 © J 7 6 5 ¨ 7 § A J 7 6 4 3 |
|
ª 9 3 2 © K 10 ¨ K 10 5 4 2 § Q 10 8 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Zmudzinski |
Chagas |
Balicki |
Brenner |
|
|
Pass |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
3§ |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
3© |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
North led a low spade for the nine and declarer's jack. Declarer
ducked a heart to South and the club switch went to the king and
ace. A diamond to the nine was followed by the ace of diamonds and
the queen, North pitching a spade. The spade return went to dummy's
king and declarer came back to hand with the ace of hearts. After
cashing the ace of spades, these cards remained:
|
ª Q © Q 9 ¨ - § 5 |
ª - © 4 ¨ J 6 § 9 |
|
ª - © J 7 ¨ - § J 7 |
|
ª - © - ¨ 10 5 § Q 10 |
Now declarer could choose how to endplay South.
The Seniors Were Right
By Christian Farwig
Germany
While some of the German ladies were waiting for the Metro to
take them away from the Stade de France last Saturday, members of a
Seniors team approached them and stated that the combination of
beauty and wit as displayed by the German ladies team is very
dangerous. Unfortunately, no more pleasantries were exchanged since
the conversation was cut short by two of the husbands showing up.
But being married to one of the ladies, I can confirm that they were
right. At least in the domestic area.
But they also show their ferocity at the table, as proved by this
masterpiece of Sabine Auken against the USA I team in the Venice Cup
quarterfinal.
Board 11. Dealer South. None Vul.
|
|
ª A Q 6 © J 6 3 ¨ J 9 8 3 § A K 7 |
ª K J 8 7 3 © A K 8 2 ¨ Q 7 § 5 3 |
|
ª 9 5 4 2 © Q 9 7 5 4 ¨ K § Q 6 4 |
|
ª 10 © 10 ¨ A 10 6 5 4 2 § J 10 9 8 2 |
The bidding went:
West |
North |
East |
South |
Van Zwol |
Dhondy |
Hoogweg |
Smith |
|
|
|
2ª1 |
Dble2 |
2NT |
3© |
3NT3 |
Dble |
4¨ |
Dble |
4© |
Dble |
Pass |
Pass |
4ª |
Pass |
5¨ |
All Pass |
|
(1) Two-suiter in either minors or majors (2) Majors (3)
Minors and maximum
After coming close to bidding a slam, v. Arnim - Auken ventured
for the Diamond-game. The opening lead of a small heart was won by
West who returned a spade. Sabine Auken now reasoned that the
spade-finesse was sure to win - something, which could not be said
about the club-finesse. So, as a precaution, she made the finesse
and discarded a club on the spade ace. Now she ruffed a heart, lead
a club to the ace, ruffed another heart and cashed the ace of
diamonds to reach this position:
|
ª - © 6 ¨ J 9 8 § K 7 |
ª K J 8 © A ¨ Q § 5 |
|
ª 4 2 © Q 9 ¨ - § Q 6 |
|
ª - © - ¨ 10 6 5 § J 10 9 |
The fall of the king of diamonds from East confirmed her
suspicion about the overall distribution and judging West to have a
5-4-2-2-hand, she rejected the club finesse and instead played club
to the king to ruff her last spade. Now the second round of trumps
brought West in to an unavoidable endplay and netted well deserved
+600, a feat not duplicated by any other declarer on this hand.
The Labours of Hercules
By Barry Rigal USA
A spectacular hand at the end of the fourth session of the
quarterfinals saw the West players at various tables struggle
mightily.
Board 14. Dealer East. None Vul.
|
|
ª 8 © Q 9 7 6 ¨ K 6 § K Q J 8 6 3 |
ª A K 6 5 4 © A K 8 4 ¨ 4 3 2 § A |
|
ª Q J 9 2 © 10 ¨ A J 8 7 5 § 9 7 4 |
|
ª 10 7 3 © J 5 3 2 ¨ Q 10 9 § 10 5
2 |
Both tables reached Six Spades by West in USA I - Italy. How
should you play on a club lead? After winning the club lead both
Hamman & Versace played a low diamond. When North mistakenly
played low there was a glimmer of hope. The ace of diamonds was
followed by the ace and king of hearts and a heart ruff. Then came a
club ruff, heart ruff, one round of trumps and then a diamond,
hoping North was 1-4-2-6. This was the ending:
|
ª - © - ¨ - § Q J 8 6 |
ª A K 6 © - ¨ 4 § - |
|
ª Q © - ¨ J 8 7 § - |
|
ª 10 7 © - ¨ Q § 10 |
North was helpless. He had to lead a club and let
declarer ruff in dummy and pitch his losing diamond. A diamond ruff
to hand enabled declarer to claim tricks 12 & 13 with the ªAK. Flat
Board! |