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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Dougal McLean returns North.

Auckland-Northland won back the Dougal McLean Inter-Provincial Trophy after an exciting weekend of on-line bridge. This region won the Open competition handsomely, were pipped at the post by Wellington in the Intermediate event and finished second in the Women’s event and 4th in the Seniors competition to hold off by 4 points a strong challenge from Otago-Southland who finished with a first place, two third places and one fourth.

Along with the Auckland-Northland Open Team, the other impressive performances of the weekend came from the Waikato Bays Women’s team who won their competition by just under 40 vps and even more emphatically, the Otago Southland Seniors who were 48.62 vps clear of second in their competition. That Waikato Bays Women’s victory was all the more impressive in that their two pairs played throughout. Both they and the Otago-Southland Seniors won all bar one of their 12 matches, great consistency.

These then were the top 3 in each competition and the overall Dougal McLean placings.

Open

           

Seniors

         

1

Auckland-Northland

 

192.09

 

1

Otago-Southland

201.53

 
                         

2

Central Districts

   

173.63

 

2

Canterbury

 

152.81

 
                         

3

Waikato Bays

   

150.09

 

3

Wellington

 

149.52

 
                         

Women

         

Intermediate

       

1

Waikato Bays

   

194.41

 

1

Wellington

 

189.67

 
                         

2

Auckland-Northland

 

154.27

 

2

Auckland - Northland

189.11

 
                         

3

Otago- Southland

 

148.13

 

3

Otago-Southland

175.82

 
                         

Dougal McLean Trophy

                   

1

Auckland - Northland

 

39

 

5

Canterbury

 

22

 
                         

2

Otago-Southland

 

35

 

6

Central Districts

 

20

 
                         

3

Waikato Bays

   

27

 

7

Top of the South

6

 
                         

4

Wellington

   

23

             

 

The winning teams were:

Open: Bill Humphrey – Jeremy Fraser-Hoskin, Ian Berrington – Malcolm Mayer, William Liu – Steve Boughey

Women : Kate Terry – Judy Pawson, Christine and Jenna Gibbons

Intermediate : Lee Miller – Chris Woods, Walt Davis- Barbara Tumilowicz, Jeffry Craanan – Marian Loader

Senior: Jeff Miller – Graeme Stout, Murat Genc – Arleen Schwartz, Peter Hall – Peter McCaskill

We will be looking at some boards from other teams during the week but for today, we will focus on the close battle in the Intermediate competition. Of course, there were many other important decisions throughout the weekend though first place was decided on the last of the 144 boards the regions played during the weekend.

Victory came down probably to an inspired choice of final contract and to the opening lead:
Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg

 

10 7

J 8 7 3

10 9 6

Q 9 8 4

 

West

North

East

South

1 ♠

Pass

2 

Pass

3 

Pass

4 ♠

All pass

What is your choice from the above North collection?

It would be a comfort for North-South to know that 4Spade-small can always be made even if it could be defeated on the most challenging lead. Also, at the other table, a rather conservative East-West auction finished in 2Spade-small with declarer making their part-score. To win the whole event, Chris Woods (West for Wellington) had to make 4Spade-small. Ironically, Chris was in the inferior major suit game (a 5-2 as opposed to a 5-3 fit) but the game which was more likely to make, as long as he did not get a club lead.

These were the four hands:

Board 60
West Deals
N-S Vul

10 7

J 8 7 3

10 9 6

Q 9 8 4

A K Q J 8

A Q 10 9 2

3

5 3

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

6 3

K 6 5

K Q J 7 5

10 7 6

 

9 5 4 2

4

A 8 4 2

A K J 2

 

West

North

East

South

1 ♠

Pass

2 

Pass

3 

Pass

4 ♠

All pass

Had Lee Miller bid 3Spade-small instead of 4Spade-small, Chris may have bid 4Heart-small, confirming a 5th heart..and there they would have rested. On a minor suit lead, 4Heart-small looks destined to be one down. Declarer can protect against a 4-1 trump break with South having 4 hearts by leading Heart-smallA and small to dummy’s Heart-smallK. However, with North having 4 hearts, it is very unlikely that West would take a second round finesse after starting with Heart-smallA.

Lee’s 4Spade-small bid looks like fast arrival after a slightly aggressive 2Diamond-small response. The danger lead here is a club. South would certainly continue with two more rounds forcing declarer to ruff. West can afford one round of trumps though unless they take that unlikely heart finesse, the contract would fail if all South’s trumps are drawn. If West then plays a diamond, a fourth round of clubs defeats the contract. The winning line of playing a diamond after at most one round of trumps is therefore risky if South had 5 clubs. With the bad spade break, declarer must lead their diamond while dummy still has a trump. Had South started with 5 clubs, a fourth round of clubs then would likely beat what might have been a cold contract had the heart break been more favourable.

  
Chris Woods  Lee Miller 23.jpg  
  Chris Woods and Lee Miller, at an earlier success

Chris was not put to the test because North chose a trump lead, allowing him to draw trumps, give up a diamond and not worry about the bad heart break. West’s 2 losing hearts disappeared on dummy’s high diamonds…7 imps to Wellington and the title by just 0.56 vp. Wellington won the head to head battle by 13 imps, collecting 14 off the last 2 boards: close!

Over the 4 competitions, every pair in 4Heart-small, the most common contract, failed while the only making pairs in 4Spade-small did not get a club lead.

That was tough on Auckland-Northland who at the half-way mark had led Wellington by 20.54 vps averaging just under 17vps per match. They found life a little harder second time round.  

Our usual thanks to David Stephen for directing and Kevin Walker for scoring this event.

Richard Solomon

 

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