Security Improvements, Access Code & Mail Communication Preview

All News

Daily Bridge in New Zealand

For Junior, Intermediate and Novice players …and others. It's FriYay.png  day!

Ugly and Uglier.

Welcome to our first JIN Club hand of the year, not in the slam or even the game zones. Indeed, as the bidding developed, you would be fast wishing you had kept your mouth firmly shut! However, we respond to partner’s opening bid with 6+ hcp… and we have 6! So, 1NT it is but what do we do next?

Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg 

 

4

J 5

9 4 3 2

A J 9 5 4 2

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

1 ♠

Pass

1 NT

Pass

2 

Pass

?

 

 

1NT shows 6-9 hcp. Your partner’s second bid pleases you as little as does their first. What to do next?

There seem to be 3 options and the third of these might not have occurred to many of the North players…and that was the winning action.

What we know about our partner’s hand is that they have at least 5 spades and at least 4 hearts and are limited to no more than 16 hcp. We seem to have no fit and wish we had passed 1Spade-small! We could try our long suit but it not that good a suit opposite perhaps no support and at it would be at the 3 level.

We are too weak to bid 2NT (that would show a nice 9-count with good holds in both minors). Passing 2Heart-small would be a disaster if partner held only a 4-card suit. So, what then our third choice? It is called “false preference” because we do prefer hearts to spades but our partner may be able to make more tricks from their 5-card spade suit if that suit was trumps…and just maybe, partner has more than 5 spades. So, 2Spade-small it is and all that remained was to put down your dummy and hear partner (through gritted teeth) say “lovely, thank you, partner”.frown

South Deals
Both Vul

4

J 5

9 4 3 2

A J 9 5 4 2

10 8 6 2

A 9 6 4

K Q

Q 10 3

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

K 7

Q 10 3

J 10 8 7 5

K 7 6

 

A Q J 9 5 3

K 8 7 2

A 6

8

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

1 ♠

Pass

1 NT

Pass

2 

Pass

2 ♠

All pass

 

West led Diamond-smallK. Declarer ducked and won Diamond-smallQ and then played a low heart to the Heart-smallJ while there was still a trump in dummy. East’s Heart-smallQ won and they played Diamond-smallJ, ruffed and overruffed. West exited a small trump to the king and ace. South could draw trumps, play a club to the ace and then a heart to Heart-small7 and West’s Heart-small9. A club continuation saw South ruff and play Heart-smallK,Heart-smallA felling East’s Heart-small10, and promoting Heart-small8 for South’s 8th trick….5 trumps, 2 minor aces and the Heart-small8. Well played.  

choices.jpg

choices!

South had a choice of bids over 1NT. Rebidding 2Spade-small might look a safer choice but that would miss a heart fit. All would be well as long as North gave false preference. They would bid the same way with 2 spades and 2 or 3 hearts.

2Spade-small is a tough contract to make but at least has a fair chance of making. There were 26 tables in play. Only 8 Souths played and made a spade part-score. 6 came to grief in 2Heart-small while the other 12 came even further to grief in higher level contracts.

Hopefully, there will be easier deals to bid and play in 2024. Remember false preference. It may not appeal with better support for the second suit to revert to opener’s opening suit but it is rarely wrong to do so… unless, of course, you have 4 or more cards in partner’s second suit!

Richard Solomon

Go Back View All News Items

Our Sponsors
  • Tauranga City Council
  • TECT.jpg