Friday 31 December 2010

Year End 2010

In the Swiss Teams at the London Year End congress we managed to avoid our usual first board cock-up by making a quiet 1NT, but disasters soon followed as I let though two games and we allowed the oppo to make 6 Hearts when we were cold for 6 Spades. After a 20-0 loss our fortunes improved somewhat and we ended 27th out of 104.

This was an interesting slam hand



Even at green against red, my 3 Hearts was a bit frivolous as it didn't really interfere with the opponents' bidding and warned declarer about the bad breaks. Declarer made 12 tricks by squeezing me in the rounded suits. You can follow the play by clicking on 'Next'.

No-one was concentrating too hard as they had stopped in game but declarer played the hand well. He did give us a very difficult chance to hold him to 11 tricks - when he led Q at trick 3, West needed to ruff high and return a club - a counter-intuitive defence that I only found by running the hand through Deep Finesse. Declarer can make 12 tricks on any defence by cashing one round of trumps before leading Q.

I was sure that Chris and Hil would be in 6 Spades and so it proved. West led a diamond which should make life easier for declarer - a reasonable line is to draw 3 rounds of trumps, then play the top clubs, throw a club on a top diamond and ruff a club to establish the suit. Now exit with a trump and dummy is high. This line needs one of the black suits to break 3-2.

It's an easy game when you can see all four hands and Chris tried a different line by ruffing hearts. When East trumped one of dummy's top diamonds it should have been fatal, but West's defence was not the best and Chris emerged with 12 tricks for a 13 imp gain.

Tuesday 14 December 2010

Singleton Queens at Peebles

Our first visit ot the Gold Cup Congress in Peebles more than lived up to all the good things that we had heard about the food, wine, friendly bridge and efficient organisation.

The bridge started off on the wrong note when we conceded a Biltcliffe Coup (with an overtrick to boot) on the very first board, but things improved after that. Ann began the weekend needing 3 Green Points to reach Grand Master, and a good win against strong opposition in the last match of the pairs allowed us to pick up more than enough greens and just make the prize list.

This deal helped, even though our bidding was not quite what it said on the tin.



Making 4 Hearts scored about 75% on the board so other pairs cannot have found it easy to bid. Chris and Hilary had languished in 1♠, so in the rather alcoholic celebration of Ann's new status she was on the receiving end of some gentle teasing as to whether a Grand Master should be opening 2NT with a stiff queen of clubs.






Chris shows what he thinks about opening 2NT with a singleton queen.





Justification was soon at hand. Next morning, Ann and I went for a swim in the splendid Hydro pool and then dropped in to watch a few boards of the Gold Cup final on vu-graph. Almost immediately Zia picked up as dealer

A 9 7 5 K 6 3 K Q 10 9 8 Q

What did Zia open? 1NT of course. This worked like a charm as he missed a diamond fit and stopped in an easy 4NT. In the other room the hand was opened with a boring 1 and they ended in 6, a good contract but doomed on the actual lie of the cards. The 13 imp gain on this hand was the start of a change in fortunes that saw Zia's team recover from an early deficit to score a convincing win.