All News

Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Ten vital points.

What are your ambitions with the following hand?

Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg

     

East Deals
E-W Vul

 

N

W

 

E

S

   
 

Spade-small

A K Q 10 9 7 5 3

Heart-small

5

Diamond-small

K 10

Club-small

J 8

 

 It has 8 playing tricks on all bar “a rainy day” but no way would you open a strong 2, let alone 2Club-small. It is a 4-loser, normally though there is the whereabouts of the Diamond-smallA and Diamond-smallQ to consider. You are going to start off with 1Spade-small, though the pre-emptive value of 4Spade-small might make that your opening choice.

After 1Spade-small, it is your partner who makes a positive bid of their own. If that is not game-forcing (as in " 2 over 1"), you really ought to bid 4Spade-small now, showing not a strong opening bid but one with plenty of spades. You do not have enough high card strength for 3Spade-small and cannot risk 2Spade-small being passed out.

By jumping to 4Spade-small, the decision to bid on rests with partner. Your only requirements may be to answer a Key Card question and then presumably to be declarer.

Game was the limit of expectations at 9 of the 14 tables and 5 drove on to slam. The game was Matchpoint Pairs. These were the North-South hands:

East Deals
E-W Vul

Spade-small

6

Heart-small

K J 7 4 2

Diamond-small

A 9 4

Club-small

A Q 7 5

   

N

W

 

E

S

   
 

Spade-small

A K Q 10 9 7 5 3

Heart-small

5

Diamond-small

K 10

Club-small

J 8

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

Pass

1 Spade-small

Pass

2 Heart-small

Pass

4 Spade-small

Pass

?

 

 

North would not know they were facing 8 reasonably solid spades. They should expect 7. Those aces are good cards but there is not really a big enough source of tricks outside spades.

How good is slam? On a club lead, it requires a club finesse, assuming South is declarer. A diamond lead gives a second finesse if you wish to choose it, though a successful heart play would save any minor suit finesse. Of course, were the Heart-smallA to be led or appear over the jack, then all your worries would be over.

Well, nearly all as this was a rather “rainy day”:

Board 22
East Deals
E-W Vul

Spade-small

6

Heart-small

K J 7 4 2

Diamond-small

A 9 4

Club-small

A Q 7 5

Spade-small

J 8 4 2

Heart-small

Q 10 9

Diamond-small

Q J 3 2

Club-small

9 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

Heart-small

A 8 6 3

Diamond-small

8 7 6 5

Club-small

K 10 6 4 3

 

Spade-small

A K Q 10 9 7 5 3

Heart-small

5

Diamond-small

K 10

Club-small

J 8

 A failing club finesse and an unfortunate spade break. With the Diamond-smallQ an almost universal lead, most South declarers made 11 tricks, including those in slam. A club lead from West holds South to 10 tricks.

However, one North-South pair finished in a different contract by a different declarer:

West

North

East

South

 

Jack

 

Jeremy

 

 

Pass

1 

Pass

2 Heart-small

Pass

3 

Pass

3 NT

All pass

 

Remember that Pairs is the game and that was very significant here. 2Heart-small was natural and Game Forcing with 3Spade-small almost insisting that spades would be trumps…except with that 3NT bid. There was no safe lead from the East hand. East’s choice was a low club. Jack did not mind at all when the bad spade break appeared. That meant a complete top when he scored 10 extra points..460, instead of the row of 450’s.

That is one of the key parts of Pairs’ bridge.

Richard Solomon

 

Go Back View All News Items

Our Sponsors