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Daily Bridge in New Zealand
Trans-Tasman Challenge – Round 4
Friday 26th May saw Round 4 of this on-going challenge between Australian and New Zealand teams, 8 rounds in all. Thus, at the half-way point, these are the current leaders.
Round 4 |
Round 3 |
Round 4 |
Round 4 |
Cumulative |
|||||||
Position |
b/fwd |
v |
Score |
||||||||
1 |
NZ Open 1 |
37.92 |
Aust Mixed 2 |
17.59 |
55.51 |
||||||
2 |
Aust Seniors 1 |
45.67 |
NZ Mixed 1 |
9.39 |
55.06 |
||||||
3 |
Aust Open 2 |
33.57 |
NZ Youth |
20.00 |
53.57 |
||||||
4 |
NZ Mixed 1 |
42.89 |
Aust Seniors 1 |
10.61 |
53.50 |
||||||
5 |
Aust Open 1 |
39.82 |
NZ Women 2 |
10.00 |
49.82 |
The big winners this time were the Australian Open 1 team who moved into the top 5 with a maximum win while the New Zealand Open 1 team took over the lead with a big win over Australia Mixed 2.
The following board provided a variety of auctions and outcomes. Firstly, how many hearts would you bid after this start:
|
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
Pass |
1 ♦ |
? |
While you are thinking about that, would it make any difference if your partner opened 1 (natural) and your right-hand opponent called 1
?
As you can imagine, there were a variety of actions in the 8 matches. The most conservative action was that of Kate Davies who did not bid any hearts, at least not initially. These were the four hands:
North Deals |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Ashton |
Patterson |
Wiltshire |
Davies |
|
Pass |
1 ♦ |
Pass |
1 ♠ |
Dbl |
2 ♣ |
3 ♥ |
5 ♦ |
Pass |
Pass |
5 ♥ |
All pass |
|
|
|
It was her partner, John Patterson, who entered the bidding first with Kate unwilling to let her opponents play 5, a good decision, as there were 11 easy tricks in that contract thanks to the working club finesse. Both opponents had run out of steam by the time 5
was bid and Kate refused the trump finesse to lose one trick in each side suit.
Meanwhile, the young Australians reached the same contract after North had opened:
West North East South
Dolbel Gordon Humphries Goss
1 1
4
5 5
All Pass
We had the carefree:
West North East South
Jones Braithwaite Millington De Livera
Pass 1 4
5 5
Pass Pass
x All Pass
Rumour has it that Andy Braithwaite did not anticipate a problem in the trump suit until he saw his partner's hand!
Barry’s double did not induce the declarer to take the heart finesse and they duly collected their +100. It was a little more comfortable for the declarer when the double came from the other side of the table:
West North East South
Schwartz Bashar Genc Moses
Pass 1 2
2 4
4
Pass
Pass 5 x All Pass
1 here might not have been a natural suit. Hence the lack of subsequent diamond bids.
Yet, not all North-Souths bid on to 5:
West North East South
Ware Foster Mayer Rankin
Pass 1 3
3 4
x Pass
5 All Pass
Double was for take-out with Julian Foster’s own 5 bid perhaps talking himself out of bidding on.
It did seem that both East and West had one heart or else we would have seen more East-West pairs try the diamond slam. There were a few triers:
West North East South
Nisbet Cormack
Pass 1 3
3 4
4
Pass
Pass 5 Pass Pass
6 All Pass
Perhaps Pamela Nisbet expected more of a double fit.
A heart was not always led against 6 though as long as after South's singleton club lead, North inserted
8 if declarer played low from dummy at trick 1, the defence would still get their two tricks. The only players who made more than 11 tricks in diamonds were those in 5
.
The sacrifice is:
There were some significant swings in matches where 5 was left as the final contract. The above gives a selection of the different actions taken by the South hand. While a suit headed by the 10 does not normally feel right for a double jump, the good shape of the South hand makes, in my view, 3
feel the right action. Tomorrow, the North hand will be in the West seat. In that case, it would be a great idea for either South or the replacement North hand to mention spades!
Today, exactly half the tables ended in 5, doubled or not, conceding a good 50 or 100. .. and you?
The next round of this challenge is on Friday June 23rd.
Richard Solomon
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