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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

South Island Pairs on-line.

This event, played over the past weekend, attracted 52 pairs, a lower  number than other recent on-line events though would have been affected by the absence of those involved internationally in Morocco.

Winners were Auckland’s Alice Young and George Sun who posted a fine 64% last round to win from Russell Dive and Russell Wilson by 1% overall:

1

Alice

Young

 

George

Sun

 

59.61

               

2

Russell

Dive

 

Russell

Wilson

 

58.69

               

3

Brad

Johnston

Sam

Coutts

 

57.30

               

4

Blair

Fisher

 

Liz

Fisher

 

55.71

               

5

Jeremy

Fraser-Hoskin

Jack

James

 

55.48

               

6

Kathy

Ker

 

Anthony

Ker

 

55.41

               

7

Max

Morrison

Jane

Lennon

 

55.03

               

8

Greg

Buzzard

Lindsay

Glover

 

54.95

               

9

Gary

Chen

 

John

Wang

 

54.64

               

10

Fuxia

Wen

 

Ian

Berrington

54.38

 

Here’s a play hand for you from the 4th session. You reach 6Heart-small on the following as East and receive the Club-smallJ lead to North’s ace. North continues clubs and all follow, South with Club-small10. We will tell you that South has 4 hearts headed by the Heart-small10. What’s your plan?

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Board 39
South Deals
Both Vul

   

A Q 10 8 2

Q J 5

J 6 2

4 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

9

A K 9 4 3

A K 10 3

K Q 3

 

Let’s follow the top two pairs as both reached 6Heart-small and both made their contracts. Let’s see Russell Dive in action first:

Board 39
South Deals
Both Vul

K 7 6

2

Q 7 5 4

A 9 7 6 5

A Q 10 8 2

Q J 5

J 6 2

4 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

9

A K 9 4 3

A K 10 3

K Q 3

 

J 5 4 3

10 8 7 6

9 8

J 10 8

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

Pass

Pass

Pass

1 ♣

Pass

1 ♠

Pass

2 

Pass

3 

Pass

4 

Pass

4 

Pass

4 NT

Pass

5 ♣

Pass

6 

All pass

There was no stopping Russell Dive (East) once his partner gave a positive response to his Precision 1Club-small opener. Three-card heart support and one key card (5Club-small) was all he needed to bid the slam.

The lead was Club-smallJ to the ace and a trump switch from North. Russell won in dummy to play two further rounds of clubs discarding a diamond from dummy. Then came Diamond-smallAK and a diamond ruff though there was no sign of the Diamond-smallQ. So, he played off 4 more rounds of trumps. With one trump left to play, this was the position:

 

 

K 7

Q

A Q 10

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

9

4

10

-

 

J 5 4

The situation was getting a little tense for North. When Russell played the Heart-small4, North discarded Spade-small7.

It was 2:1 that South held Spade-smallK as North was known to hold Diamond-smallQ, but Russell got it right by playing small to the ace.

It was Alice in charge when she and George held the East-West cards.

Board 39
South Deals
Both Vul

K 7 6

2

Q 7 5 4

A 9 7 6 5

A Q 10 8 2

Q J 5

J 6 2

4 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

9

A K 9 4 3

A K 10 3

K Q 3

 

J 5 4 3

10 8 7 6

9 8

J 10 8

 

West

North

East

South

George

 

Alice

 

 

 

 

Pass

Pass

Pass

1 

Pass

2 ♣

Pass

4 ♠

Pass

4 NT

Pass

5 ♣

Pass

6 

All pass

 

 

George’s 2Club-small was Drury, showing 10-11 hcp and 3 card heart support. Alice needed no further encouragement. 4Spade-small, with hearts as trumps, was Key Card. Again West showed one. Alice then asked for the Heart-smallQ with George’s 6Heart-small saying he held that card but no outside kings.

Alice  received Diamond-small9 lead which was covered by both jack and queen and won by the ace. She played a trump to dummy and a low club. It is not terminal for declarer but certainly more awkward if North ducks this. However, North took their ace and exited a second club.

Alice won, drew trumps and cashed a second high diamond. The Diamond-small7 was still her problem card as North held two diamonds. She cashed her last trump and basically was in the same position as Russell. However, foreseeing that they had to retain Spade-smallK doubleton, North let go the Diamond-small4, not such an obvious discard as say Diamond-smallQ would have been at Russell's table. 

However, Alice was counting diamonds and could cash Diamond-small10 and Diamond-small3 before the Spade-smallA at trick 13 to make her slam.

The South players had their chance at trick 1. A spade lead will beat the contract, removing the squeeze possibility and forcing declarer to try to ruff two diamonds in dummy (or take the diamond finesse and ruff one) and at the same time establish two club tricks, all too hard with a 4-1 trump break as well.

Richard Solomon

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