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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Michael “at  the wheel”.

Michael Ware is our top master-point earner, a regular New Zealand international player and currently on a rich run of success, as at last weekend’s Wellington Main Regional Teams. Let’s take a look at Michael “at work”.

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North Deals
Both Vul

   

Spade-small

K 7 6

Heart-small

A 5 2

Diamond-small

A 9 6

Club-small

10 9 8 4

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

3 2

Heart-small

K J 8 7 4 3

Diamond-small

4 3 2

Club-small

A K

 

West

North

East

South

Michael Ware

 

Matthew McManus

 

 

Pass

1 Club-small

Pass

1 Heart-small

Pass

2 Heart-small

Pass

3 Heart-small

Pass

4 Heart-small

All pass

 The bidding was a little more complex than it appears. 1Club-small promised 4+ hearts and 11-20 hcp. 1Heart-small was at least game invite. 2Heart-small showed 6+ hearts with less than 4 diamonds. 3Heart-small was invitational.

Michael commented that with trump support, the East hand was better than the average 11 count…hence the raise to game. North led a trump which collected South’s Heart-smallQ. Michael drew trumps in 2 more rounds with South discarding two low diamonds. With the East hand as dummy and West's shape unknown, that seemed to be the safest suit to discard. It looked like the fate of the contract depended on which defender held Spade-smallA.

These were the four hands:

North Deals
Both Vul

Spade-small

A J 8 5

Heart-small

10 9 6

Diamond-small

K J 8

Club-small

J 7 5

Spade-small

K 7 6

Heart-small

A 5 2

Diamond-small

A 9 6

Club-small

10 9 8 4

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

3 2

Heart-small

K J 8 7 4 3

Diamond-small

4 3 2

Club-small

A K

 

Spade-small

Q 10 9 4

Heart-small

Q

Diamond-small

Q 10 7 5

Club-small

Q 6 3 2

 

West

North

East

South

Michael Ware

 

Matthew McManus

 

 

Pass

1 Club-small

Pass

1 Heart-small

Pass

2 Heart-small

Pass

3 Heart-small

Pass

4 Heart-small

All pass

 Michael played two more rounds of trumps, South discarding Spade-small4 and a third diamond. Michael, West, discarded two diamonds and North Spade-small5 (low encouraging) as their first discard and then Spade-small8. The outlook thus looked bleak as North seemed to hold Spade-smallA.

Michael cashed Club-smallAK and played a diamond to his now singleton Diamond-smallA, collecting South’s now bare Diamond-smallQ before ruffing a club with dummy’s last trump.

These cards remained:

 

Spade-small

A J

Heart-small

Diamond-small

K J

Club-small

Spade-small

K 7 6

Heart-small

Diamond-small

Club-small

10

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

3 2

Heart-small

Diamond-small

4 3

Club-small

 

Spade-small

Q 10 9

Heart-small

Diamond-small

Club-small

Q

Michael was in the East hand having taken the first 9 tricks (6 hearts, Club-smallAK and Diamond-smallA) and exited with a small diamond to North, discarding a spade from the West hand. North could cash two high diamonds but had to give Michael his Spade-smallK at trick 13.

Certainly, South could have kept one more diamond and one less spade which would meant the diamond exit could have been won by South. However, in a contract which basically had no play, Michael gave himself the best chance of making and did so thanks to South's failure to keep a second diamond. 12 imps to Michael’s team when the same contract failed on Heart-smallQ lead at the other table.

Michael was the only West to declare this contract and was the only player to come to 10 tricks. After the lead of Spade-small10 from South and a spade continuation, the contract cannot be made as long as South does not discard a club.

Richard Solomon

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