All News
World Championships in Wuhan. Day 3
Although position-wise, the Bridge Blacks (and the Bridge Masters) stayed just where they started the day, our Open Team ended their run of five poor losses with two wins and a small loss. Meanwhile it was pretty much the same at the end of the day for the Bridge Ferns with a poor result against Chinese Taipei sandwiched between satisfactory scores against USA 2 and Pakistan. It was always going to be a hard day for the Mixed Blacks against leaders England and highly placed Russia and Latvia. They need to regroup after their losses: only one top 5 team awaits them on Day 4.
Open (Bridge Blacks) Women (Bridge Ferns)
Match |
Opponents |
imps |
NZ Vps |
NZ Position |
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Match |
Opponents |
imps |
NZ vs |
NZ pos. |
7 |
Guadeloupe |
47-2 |
18.66 |
22nd |
|
7 |
USA2 |
31-33 |
7.39 |
14th |
8 |
China |
13-21 |
7.71 |
22nd |
|
8 |
Chinese Taipei |
21-53 |
2.97 |
16th |
9. |
Canada |
46-32 |
13.25 |
22nd |
|
9. |
Pakistan |
48-15 |
17.17 |
13th |
Seniors (Bridge Masters) Mixed (Mixed Blacks)
Match |
Opponents |
imps |
NZ Vps |
NZ Position |
|
Match |
Opponents |
imps |
NZ vps |
NZ pos. |
7. |
Italy |
22-47 |
4.08 |
24th |
|
7. |
Russia |
19-41 |
4.62 |
14th |
8. |
Denmark |
18-41 |
4.44 |
24th |
|
8. |
England |
20-34 |
6.25 |
14th |
9. |
Sweden |
9-28 |
5.20 |
24th |
|
9. |
Latvia |
26-70 |
1.45 |
17th |
We will concentrate today on the Bridge Blacks. Our first offering is actually from Match 5 and features a nice piece of deceptive declarer play by GeO Tislevoll, necessary not to bring home a swing but to save one as the same unlikely contract was made at the other table.
Round 5 Open
Board 13 North Deals Both Vul |
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As East, GeO was in 4 on the lead of the 9. With two heart losers along with a trump and the A, he seemed to have a hard task to make 10 tricks. In the bidding, he had shown to hold both black suits.
However, at trick 1, he made an important play of the J from dummy which was covered by North and won, naturally in the East hand. The J was a no cost play which was to pay dividends.
At trick 2, he led a club honour won by South who found the contract -killing switch of a heart. GeO played low from dummy and the also deceptive10 under the jack. To North, it looked very much that GeO was 5125 rather than the actual red suit holding. So, out came a second diamond from North to give his partner a diamond ruff. However, away went the 8 from GeO's hand and after ruffing the 7 in dummy, he made 10 tricks out of 9.
A little deception brings rewards for GeO Michael Whibley and Matt Brown... only temporarily lost, we hope, is
"grand" bidders Denis Humphries. Read on...
The big win over Guadeloupe was expected but under the circumstances so important, practically and psychologically. A 7-1 heart break prevented a big win over China as Michael Cornell’s aggressive but otherwise making 6 slam had to fail when the defender on lead got his ruff: 13 out rather than in: a loss by 8 instead of a win by 18. However, there was some good news in the final match of the day against Canada.
Whibley- Brown had the pleasure of bidding (and making!) grand-slam on two successive boards and collecting a match-winning 29 imps in the process. Both were bid despite strong opposition interference:
Round 9
Board 4 West Deals Both Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
Matt Brown | Michael Whibley | ||
1 ♠ | Pass | 2 ♦ | 4 ♥ |
4 NT | Pass | 5 ♦ | Pass |
7 ♦ | Pass | Pass | 7 ♥ |
7 ♠ | All pass |
Despite the interference, Matt asked for key-cards with diamonds as trumps. The response showed 0 or 3 and he decided to gamble that a vulnerable 4 bidder would hold the ace of his long suit. Therefore, he could jump to grand on the basis of his partner holding the other three. (The K was to be a bonus as the clubs would all disappear on the run of his spades.) South’s 7 rather confirmed that Matt’s assumption was correct and only succeeded in turning +2140 into +2210.
Rather like in football where we salute the scorer of a hattrick rather than a defender who cleared the ball off the team goal- line, we salute the grand bidder and tend to forget the other pair who also created the swing. At the other table, Michael Ware, South, either bid 5 directly or got raised by the somewhat uninspiring North hand. This contract was doubled for the obvious 3 down to create the 16-imp swing.
So, with 2210 in your bag, you move to Board 5:
Round 9
Board 5 North Deals N-S Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
Matt Brown | Michael Whibley | ||
2 NT | 3 ♠ | Pass | |
4 ♦ | Pass | 5 ♣ | Pass |
5 NT | Pass | 7 ♣ | Pass |
7 ♠ | Dbl | All pass |
2NT was obviously for the minors and was described as “weak but constructive”. 4 and 5 were both cue-bids with 5NT being key card. Michael was now always going to grand but did bid 7 just in case his partner had long hearts rather than spade support. North’s double sounded “Lightner style” looking for an unusual lead… not a minor. Hence, South led a heart rather than either minor (not that it mattered). This time hearts broke 8-1 rather than a spoiling 9-0 and Michael soon claimed the 26hcp doubled grand slam. That was 13 imps in as the Canadians stopped in small slam.
Bangladesh, cellar-dwellers Morocco and 10th place Australia await the Bridge Blacks on Day 4 and hopefully some progress up the table with 4 countries only two vps ahead of New Zealand. We wish them and our other teams well.
Richard Solomon
p.s.
Losing One's Way
That heading could sum up our Seniors' Team so far in this competition but it also summed up the situation one member of their team found themselves in yesterday.
Denis Humphries set off from his hotel to meet his bridge partner,David Dolbel. He took the metro, all good so far. He got off at the right station and then became directionally challenged. He started walking in what he thought was the right direction.
He came upon another metro station. He thought this was not quite right but he could find his way from there. The problem was he back at the station he started the day. We hope Dave Dolbel is not still waiting....
As Joni Mitchell put it in her song "Circle Game"...
" We can only look behind from where we came.
We go round, round, round round in the circle game."
Here's hoping our Seniors do go up rather than keep going round.