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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Day 6 : a day of promise.

A good or better day for all three Kiwi teams though all eyes are now on our Open Team who are in the top 8 and playing consistently well. A small loss to Israel was followed  by wins over USA 2 and Chile and they finished the day in 7th place, 10.31 vps ahead of 9th placed China and only 4 vps behind Italy in 4th place. Italy are their next opponents to be followed by Hong Kong China and Ireland.

New Zealand Results

         
               

Open

   

imps

 

vps

 

position

Israel

   

33-31

 

10.61

 

6

               

USA2

   

54-37

 

14.39

 

5

               

Chile

   

27-23

 

11.2

 

7

               

Women

           

Israel

   

13-64

 

0.75

 

15

               

Morocco

 

40-28

 

13.28

 

15

               

Turkey

   

24-6

 

14.6

 

15

               

Mixed

             

United Arab Emirates

23-50

 

3.74

 

21

               

Israel

   

49-55

 

8.24

 

20

               

Barbados

 

37-22

 

13.97

 

19

 

Two wins a ‘piece for our Women and Mixed teams, with the Women’s victory over 3rd placed Turkey being the most impressive. Back though to our Open Team against Israel and one rather important card, Diamond-smallJ.

Board 23
South Deals
Both Vul

Q 10 8 6 3

K 9 8 7 2

J 6

9

2

A J 10 5 3

K Q 10 4

A 7 6

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

A 7 4

Q 6

5 2

Q J 10 8 4 2

 

K J 9 5

4

A 9 8 7 3

K 5 3

 

West

North

East

South

 

Whibley

 

Brown

 

 

 

1 ♣

1 

x

2 ♣

3 ♠

5 ♣

Pass

Pass

Dbl

All pass

 

 

 

Matt Brown’s 1Club-small was 2+ clubs and the Israeli pair soon unearthed their club fit. With the North hand weak, 3Spade-small looked the limit for North-South. With some defence, Matt Brown doubled the final contract and led his singleton heart.

With the club finesse working, it looks superficially that this contract can be made though declarer cannot draw trumps because of the two losing spades in the East hand. If the contract could be made, it would not be easy. 

Recognising this and that the lead was probably a singleton, declarer won Heart-smallA and played Diamond-smallK at trick 2. Matt won his ace and exited a second diamond. Guessing South had the majority of the missing diamonds, declarer put in Diamond-small10…and within seconds the defence had scored Diamond-smallJ, Heart-smallK and Club-smallK as an over-ruff following the third round of hearts…two down, +500.

Meanwhile at the other table:

West

North

East

South

Mayer

 

Ware

 

 

 

 

1 

1 

1 ♠

1 NT

3 ♠

4 ♣

4 ♠

5 ♣

Dbl

All pass

 

 

 

The opening bid and lead proved crucial. Michael Ware’s 1NT showed clubs, meaning that Malcolm Mayer, West, got to be declarer in the same contract. North’s “crime” was to lead his partner’s opening suit with Diamond-smallJ! South played Diamond-smallA and a second diamond.  Now Malcolm Mayer could play a spade to dummy and draw trumps via the finesse. Two spades disappeared on the high diamonds and Malcolm only lost Diamond-smallA and Heart-smallK….+750 and 15 most valuable imps in.

After only 5 boards against USA 2, New Zealand were 39-0 up but watch the following:

Board 4
West Deals
Both Vul

Q J 7

A 8 2

7 6

Q J 9 5 2

K 9 8

9 5 4

A 5 3 2

A 7 3

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

5 4

10 7 6 3

Q J 10 9 8

10 6

 

A 10 6 3 2

K Q J

K 4

K 8 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

Whibley

 

Brown

Pass

Pass

Pass

1 NT

Pass

3 ♣

Pass

3 ♠

Pass

4 ♠

All pass

 

3Club-small was a major suit enquiry and 3Spade-small showed a 5-card suit. It looks like Matt Brown has a trump, a club and two diamonds to lose..but watch! West led a low heart won in dummy. Spade-smallQ won the next trick and Matt played Spade-smallJ losing to West’s king. West returned a third spade. East’s discard on the third spade was Diamond-smallQ, showing a run in the suit.

Matt won in hand to play Club-smallK, ducked to be followed by a trump on which East discarded Club-small10, giving count in that suit to his partner. Thus, when Matt played a second club, West ducked that as well.

Matt had one last slim chance. He cashed his two remaining heart winners and then played his third club. With no hearts left, West was end-played into leading Diamond-smallA and a second diamond… contract made.

I said 39-0 up after 5 boards but Board 4 was the only flat board among those 5 as the same play had been found at the other table!

Unfortunately, the Americans picked up three significant swings in the remaining 11 boards though the Kiwis still recorded an impressive 17 imp victory.

The following board was good and bad for New Zealand, good for the Open Team but not so good for our Women.

Board 32
West Deals
E-W Vul

7 4

Q 10

Q J 6 5 3

Q 10 6 3

10 3

3 2

10 9 7 4 2

A K 8 7

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

A Q J 9 8 6 5

K J 9 5 4

J

 

K 2

A 8 7 6

A K 8

9 5 4 2

 

West

North

East

South

 

Whibley

 

Brown

Pass

Pass

1 ♠

Dbl

Pass

2 

4 

Pass

4 ♠

4 NT

Pass

5 ♣

Dbl

Pass

Pass

5 

Dbl

All pass

 

 

At the other table in both Open and Women’s matches and at both tables in the NZ Mixed match, East had been left to play comfortably in 4Spade-small making an overtrick. Not so Michael Whibley or Carol Richardson- Andi Boughey’s opponents.

Matt decided to let his partner play in his first bid suit, diamonds, while Carol and Andi were defending 5Club-smallx. At both tables, the lead was Spade-smallA and a second spade. Both declarers then led a club from the South hand. When the Wests ducked, both East players scored their Club-smallJ… good and not so good for the defenders.

Against Michael Whibley, East exited with Heart-smallK, meaning the defence could only take 2 more club tricks and a diamond. That left Matt 3 down …- 500 and a 5 imp gain. Carol was forced to lead away from her heart holding or give a ruff and discard. The Israeli North only lost 3 trumps and Spade-smallA for down 2 and that was 8 imps away.

It is not always a plus to win a cheap trick!

In Denmark and China, our Women take on next two teams challenging for the top 8. They also face Egypt. The same applies to our Mixed Team who face China and Belgium along with Canada who are just above them in the table.

Richard Solomon

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