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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

18th World Youth Teams Championships

6 wins: 6 losses.

Day 3 saw a repeat of the previous two days for the New Zealand Under 21 team in that they recorded two wins and two losses, though there was a difference. The wins were larger than the losses. Also, in defeating England, they beat one of the top performing countries. These were the results:

England

27- 21

 

11.87

Hungary

22-27

 

8.42

Netherlands

26-41

 

5.81

Ireland

 

46-4

 

18.65

         

 

That left New Zealand in 14th place with 111.33. With the top 8 qualifying for the knock-out stage, 8th  placed Japan are on 139.59. The win against England was particularly impressive in that the Kiwis had 8 positive swings to 4 in what was a low-scoring match. Also, they were unlucky against Ireland in that there was a cold grand-slam which was bid by under half the 20 Under 21s. Both the Irish and the Kiwis bid to grand. 
Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg

What would you bid here:

     

South Deals
None Vul

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

K 10 8 7 6 5

K J 6

K 9 6 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

2 ♠

3 ♣

3 ♠

?

 

2Spade-small was a Weak 2.

However, these two boards produced swings, firstly the previous day against Singapore:

Board 2
East Deals
N-S Vul

9 6 3

A 10 8 5

Q 6 4 3

8 5

K J

J 7 6 2

A 7 5 2

A J 6

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

10 4 2

K Q 9 4

8

K 10 9 7 2

 

A Q 8 7 5

3

K J 10 9

Q 4 3

 

West

North

East

South

Alice

 

Leon

 

 

 

Pass

1 ♠

Dbl

2 ♠

4 

4 ♠

Pass

Pass

5 ♣

Pass

5 

Dbl

All pass

 

 When Zachary and Ryan were North-South, New Zealand rather stole the contract. Ryan opened 1Spade-small in 2nd seat as South. Rather conservatively, West passed and Zachary raised to 2Spade-small which ended the bidding. After a heart lead, Ryan was able to make this contract for the loss of one spade, Diamond-smallA and three club tricks.

However, the bidding at the other table was much livelier. (see above) A decent penalty for Alice and Ryan was available in 4Spade-small but as East, Leon ended as declarer in 5Heart-smallx. South started with Spade-smallA and a second spade. Leon played a heart to the king and ruffed his losing spade in the West hand. Next came Heart-smallJ, taken by North’s ace and exposing the 4-1 trump break.

North shifted to a diamond taken by the ace. Leon could take the marked trump finesse, drew trumps in 2 further rounds and then guessed the position of the Club-smallQ correctly. 5Heart-smallx made for 650 and 13 imps to the Kiwis. An initial diamond lead or switch would have made 5Heart-small too hard to make with the 4-1 trump split.

Leon outbid his Hungarian opponent on this board:

South Deals
None Vul

K 10 9 3

A J 9 2

8 7 2

J 3

A 6 5

3

A 9 5

A Q 10 8 7 5

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

K 10 8 7 6 5

K J 6

K 9 6 4

 

Q J 8 7 4 2

Q 4

Q 10 4 3

2

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

2 ♠

3 ♣

3 ♠

6 ♣

All pass

No messing from Leon in bidding the slam which made even without Ramon’s Spade-smallA. There were two ways of getting rid of the diamond loser. Ramon received the Heart-smallA lead and could soon claim. With the same bidding up to 3Spade-small, the Hungarian East satisfied himself with 5Club-small…and that was 11 imps to the Kiwis.

Leon 2023.jpg  
slamming successfully...

On Day 4, New Zealand takes on 2 of the top 3, Denmark and USA 1, along with mid-table China and Germany.

Richard Solomon

 

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