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Daily Bridge in New Zealand
Kevin Skoropada.
Southern Winners of the National Pairs.
Kevin Skoropada and Moss Wylie had a great weekend at the National Pairs emerging as clear winners. The event was supposed to be held at the Wellington Bridge Club though the live event fell victim to Covid.
There were 48 pairs taking part with pairs playing two boards against each other pair, 94 boards in all over 4 sessions. There were four outstanding scores in a tight competitive event, one per session:
%
Session 1 70.33 Bill Humphrey – Paul Carson
Session 2 66.20 Candice Smith – Kinga Hajmasi
Session 3 65.76 Jan Cormack – Grant Jarvis
Session 4 65.67 Kevin Skoropada – Moss Wylie
Kevin and Moss were very consistent with % s of 59.35, 55.50 and 59.78 before the booming finish. They won by a clear 3% per session. These were the top 10:
1 |
Kevin |
Skoropada |
Moss |
Wylie |
60.09 |
2598.4 |
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2 |
Jan |
Cormack |
Grant |
Jarvis |
57.09 |
2468.8 |
|||
3 |
John |
Davidson |
Sam |
Coutts |
56.89 |
2460 |
|||
4 |
Paul |
Carson |
Bill |
Humphrey |
55.98 |
2420.7 |
|||
5 |
Malcolm |
Mayer |
Michael |
Ware |
55.93 |
2418.4 |
|||
6 |
Fuxia |
Wen |
Ian |
Berrington |
55.06 |
2380.8 |
|||
7 |
James |
Yang |
Yuzhong |
Chen |
54.53 |
2357.8 |
|||
8 |
June |
Lei |
Jeter |
Liu |
54.31 |
2348.3 |
|||
9 |
Jane |
Lennon |
Alan |
Grant |
54.21 |
2344 |
|||
10 |
Alice |
Young |
George |
Sun |
53.83 |
2327.7 |
Kevin and Moss celebrating a previous success
Moss has been playing regularly on the tournament scene all over the country for many years and has consistently performed well with many partners. However, Kevin may be unfamiliar to many readers. So, here is a little about Kevin, self written:
"I started playing (Goren) rubber bridge at home in Vancouver, Canada at the age of 11. When 14, I started playing CC Wei Precision with my father at the local duplicate bridge games. By the time I was 18, I was playing with some partners who went on to play as international level for Canada.
In 1983 I left Canada to see the world ending up in New Zealand where I met Donna, my future wife. After that, I dabbled with competitive bridge, (due to having a young family), played social bridge and read lots of bridge books until 2017 when I joined the welcoming Invercargill Bridge Club. The last five years I've up skilled in modern systems and modern Precision with a small amount of 2/1. Nevertheless, good card play is the key to doing well- 50% of the time you and partner will be defending.”
Here is one from the winners with Kevin demonstrating what he means with respect to accurate defence:
Board 41 |
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West |
North |
East |
South |
Kevin |
Moss |
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Pass |
1 ♦ |
2 ♣ |
2 ♠ |
3 ♣ |
3 ♠ |
Pass |
4 ♠ |
All pass |
At trick 1, your partner leads A. Which card should you play as North? You are playing reverse signals, low encourage.
At a few tables, West was declarer and North did not find the necessary club lead. However, of the many North players who received the A lead, only two, Kevin Skoropada and Jan Cormack, did not encourage their partners at trick 1. Jan played 8 (discouraging) and her partner, Grant Jarvis, found the necessary heart switch while Kevin “screamed” for a switch to the higher red suit by throwing J.
Board 41 |
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West |
North |
East |
South |
Kevin |
Moss |
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Pass |
1 ♦ |
2 ♣ |
2 ♠ |
3 ♣ |
3 ♠ |
Pass |
4 ♠ |
All pass |
Grant switched to J while Moss switched to a low heart with Kevin inserting 10. Kevin soon won the lead with A and cashed K and A to defeat 4.
The only other defender to find a switch at trick 2 was Jan Whyte who switched to J also defeating 4.
With the East hand unlimited in strength, it might be right from South’s point of view for the defence to cash two club tricks, playing Pairs. However, at most tables North overcalled in clubs and South really ought to find a heart switch without signal from their partner. Therefore, they should switch, with a heart being the more logical switch.
However, a defender should make it as easy as possible for their partner. North can see the diamond danger the moment their ace has been knocked out. Even more so than South, they can see the need for a heart switch. A decent partner just needs to hold J, not too much to ask for!
Either way, the opponents should be held to 9 tricks.
Alive or Dead?
The auction, that is. It’s up to you.
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West |
North |
East |
South |
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1 ♠ |
2 ♥ |
Pass |
Pass |
? |
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Richard Solomon