All News
New Zealand in Korea...Day 3
Our Open Team Take The Lead
With three tough matches to complete the day, the New Zealand Open Team needed a good result in their opening match of Day 3 against Korea 2…and they achieved this winning 46-12 (17.63). With the overnight leaders, India, drawing their match, this took New Zealand into second place, within 2 vps of the leaders, Chinese Taipei. Newell-Reid missed a 50% slam which made for the only significant loss but New Zealand picked up lots including 16 lovely imps for a double game swing on Board 10.
Board 10 East Deals Both Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
Bach | Cornell | ||
1 NT | 2 ♦ | ||
2 ♠ | Pass | 3 ♣ | 3 ♠ |
3 NT | All pass |
2 showed both majors with Ashley’s 2 being a transfer to clubs.
Michael Cornell got to make two overtricks as East in 3NT after South led a high heart. Michael elected not to duck for fear of a spade switch. However, when North took the their A, they switched to a spade. Meanwhile…..
West North East South
Newell Reid
1NT 2
2NT Pass 3NT 4
Pass 4 x All Pass
Again 2 showed the majors though Martin Reid was not prepared to defend 3NT. 4 forced preference and Peter obliged by holding one ace, enough to make his doubled contract.
Our Ladies, too, made a good start beating 11th placed India 68-31 (18.04). Board 10 was good for them too:
West North East South
Humphries Jacob
1NT 2 (majors)
X 2 Pass 4
All Pass
Spade preference was all Steph needed to head to game. Meanwhile, Palmer-Cartner pushed their opponents to the 5 level, gaining 100. Humphries-Jacob picked up 12 more by bidding this nice distributional slam:
Humphries (dealer) Jacob
AK43 Q95
8 AK6532
AK98754 106
Q A3
Bidding
1 1
1 2 (4TH suit)
3 3
3 4
4NT (RKCB in ) 5 (2key cards +Q)
6 Pass
6 made an overtrick when trumps broke 2-2. There were plenty more on the “in tray” too.
Good News All Around
In match 2, the Open Team had double good news with a 49-23 (16.38) win over Australia, great on any day but also in that it took New Zealand into the number one position, by nearly 4 vps. Whibley-Brown outbid and outplayed their opponents by making 10 tricks on the following 4 where their opponents were in part-score making just 9 tricks:
Board 28 West Deals N-S Vul |
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The major honours lay well for the NZ declarer, Michael Whibley (North) and he was able to ruff a diamond with the very valuable 9 to make 10 tricks.
Good Day for our Ladies
Our Ladies had a small win, 43-36 (12.16) over mid-table Korea 1 and in their final match beat Singapore36-26 (12.97). Three wins in the day took them up to 4th, albeit nearly 23vps behind 3rd placed Australia.
The New Zealand Open Team played two of the top 4 in their final two matches of the day and came away almost even, a 30-28 (10.66) over India and a 5-15 loss to Japan (7.03).
"Luck" is not involved.
Board 13 against India did not prove “unlucky” for the Indians. It was more of a case of bidding too high with two little, vulnerable, as Newell-Reid caught their opponents in 3 x:
Board 13 North Deals Both Vul |
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Once the defence had drawn three rounds of trumps, there was nowhere for West to go for tricks. He managed just 5, 4 down vulnerable, a nice +1100 to sit very nicely when a routine 3NT was made in the other room.
The match against Japan saw no swing higher than 5imps. Malaysia did New Zealand a big favour in beating Chinese Taipei in the last match of the day, to leave New Zealand still ahead as follows:
- New Zealand 151.04
- Chinese Taipei 147.25
- India 143.65
- Japan 142.74
Day 4 sees the completion of Round Robin 1, with our Open team playing 7th and 8th placed Korea 1 and Singapore before finishing with 12 vps for their bye. Our Ladies play China Hong Kong and Indonesia. Go The Kiwis!
Richard Solomon