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Interesting Bidding

The Effect of Nuisance Bidding by Anthony Ker

Hot off the press. Our first bidding article fresh from the National Teams held in New Plymouth (19th/20th November)

Round 6 saw the decisive clash between the two leading teams in the New Plymouth National Teams event. Board 9 saw the West players holding a healthy 24 count but facing a tricky bidding challenge. First, try bidding these two hands with your favourite partner:

West               East

Spade-smallKQJ2              Spade-small 1094

Heart-smallAK3                Heart-small  J65

Diamond-smallAQ106            Diamond-small  K752

Club-smallAJ                   Club-small K98

 

North is the dealer. E/W are Vul and there are three passes to West. A typical Acol auction might be;

West                    East

                             Pass

2Club-small                        2Diamond-small

2NT (23-24)        3NT

Pass

 

 Failure. The trick is, of course, to reach the making 6Diamond-small and avoid the doomed 6NT. North has the Club-smallQ and will make it as long as they do not lead 4th best vs 6NT - tip - do not lead 4th best vs 6NT! It's amazing how many people do this without hesitation. It's completely different from leading against 3NT.

Anyway, Charles and I had the technology to get there, using the Fantunes bidding system. Here's how it works:

West                                                 East

1Club-small (14+, clubs or balanced)             1Spade-small (0-11 no major)

2Heart-small (18+ with Club-small or 23+ balanced)    2Spade-small (4+ points)

2NT (23+ balanced)                          3Diamond-small  (natural)

4Diamond-small (Diamond-small support start cue-bidding)   5Club-small (1 keycard, control in clubs, no  

                                                                control in either major)

6Diamond-small (expects to lose Spade-smallA and make the rest, discarding any heart losers on spade winners).

All very fine in theory. I'm sure Martin Reid and Peter Newell have their own route to 6Diamond-small using their highly developed relays after a strong club opening.

What actually happened

 However, these days you seldom have the luxury of an uncontested auction. Despite having only 9 points between them, both N/S pairs were in there making life difficult for their opponents. Here's how the auction went at the table where Martin and Peter played against John Patterson and Murat Genc.

Board 9
North Deals
E-W Vul
A 8 3
10 2
8 3
Q 10 6 4 3 2
K Q J 2
A K 3
A Q 10 6
A J
 
N
W   E
S
 
10 9 4
J 6 5
K 7 5 2
K 9 8
 
7 6 5
Q 9 8 7 4
J 9 4
7 5
West North East South
  Pass Pass Pass
1  2  2 NT Pass
3  Pass 3 NT All pass

(1Club-small was 16+ Precision style.)

West must have been tempted but the diamond fit had not been located. With South on lead, the club attack was through the AJ not around to it and 11 tricks resulted.

Meanwhile, Michael Ware had heard two passes and was admiring his stunning collection in the above South hand. This is an automatic pass for 99% of the bridge world but Michael is not the leading NZ master point holder for nothing. He opened a 2Diamond-small Multi! 10 losers, 3 points, only 5 hearts. It is truly awful but Michael's timing was perfect. Watch how we struggled to find the best spot after this diabolical start to the auction;

Board 9
North Deals
E-W Vul
A 8 3
10 2
8 3
Q 10 6 4 3 2
K Q J 2
A K 3
A Q 10 6
A J
 
N
W   E
S
 
10 9 4
J 6 5
K 7 5 2
K 9 8
 
7 6 5
Q 9 8 7 4
J 9 4
7 5
West North East South
Charles Ker GeO Tislevoll Anthony Ker Michael Ware
  Pass Pass 2 
Dbl Rdbl Pass 2 
Dbl Pass 3  Pass
3  Pass 4  Pass
4 NT Pass 5  Pass
6  All pass    

 (redouble was for rescue)

The Moysian 4-3 was solid but not as good as 6Diamond-small. The extra trump is essential. East's 3Heart-small was good in that it set up a game force and alerted West to the slam potential. The raise to 4Spade-small was perhaps not so good in that the diamonds got lost. West might have recovered the situation by jumping to 6Diamond-small over 5Club-small to offer a choice of slams but he was expecting a 4-4 fit in spades.

In case you are wondering 2Heart-smallx would have cost 800. No good at Pairs but no great disaster at Teams when 660 is available and a possible 1370 on offer.

GeO Tislevoll was on lead to 6Spade-small and he had his thinking cap on. Both opponents seemed to be reasonably balanced. His partner had long hearts and at least 2 spades. Was there not a good chance he was short in clubs? Accordingly, he led a low club away from the queen, got in with the Spade-smallA and led another club. Close but no cigar. When Michael followed to the second club, Charles was able to draw the rest of the trumps, take a heart discard on the Club-smallK and claim when diamonds behaved.

That was a slightly fortuitous 13 imps to the Ker team, who won the match 25-22 and the event in a very close finish by 0.32 VPs.

So, without the interference, would both East-West pairs have found the diamond slam? I think so.

(The picture is of Anthony and Charles Ker.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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