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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:

Bridge in NZ.pngnz map.jpg

     

North Deals
None Vul

 

N

W

 

E

S

   
 

K Q 8 3

10 9 8 7 6 4 2

2

3

 

West

North

East

South

 

Pass

1 

?

While you are thinking about that, would it make any difference if your partner opened 1Club-small (natural) and your right-hand opponent called 1Diamond-small?

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
None Vul

5 4

A Q J 5

7 6

K 10 9 8 4

A J 7 6 2

3

K J 9 5 3

Q 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

10 9

K

A Q 10 8 4

A J 7 6 5

 

K Q 8 3

10 9 8 7 6 4 2

2

3

 

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 5Diamond-small, 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 5Heart-small 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
                       
1Club-small                   1Diamond-small                   4Heart-small

5Diamond-small                   5Heart-small                   All Pass

 

We had the carefree:

West              North             East                South

Jones             Braithwaite  Millington    De Livera
                        Pass                1Diamond-small                   4Heart-small
5Diamond-small                    5Heart-small                   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                1Diamond-small                   2Heart-small
2Spade-small                   4Heart-small                   4Spade-small                   Pass
Pass                 5Heart-small                   x                     All Pass

1Diamond-small here might not have been a natural suit. Hence the lack of subsequent diamond bids.

Yet, not all North-Souths bid on to 5Heart-small:

West              North             East                South

Ware              Foster            Mayer            Rankin
                        Pass                1Diamond-small                   3Heart-small
3Spade-small                   4Club-small                   x                      Pass
5Diamond-small                  All Pass

Double was for take-out with Julian Foster’s own 5Club-small 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                   1Diamond-small                 3Heart-small
            3Spade-small                   4Heart-small                   4Spade-small                  Pass
            Pass                 5Heart-small                   Pass                Pass
            6Diamond-small                   All Pass

Perhaps Pamela Nisbet expected more of a double fit.     

A heart was not always led against 6Diamond-small though as long as after South's singleton club lead, North inserted Club-small8 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 5Diamond-small.

The sacrifice is:

low cost.jpg

There were some significant swings in matches where 5Diamond-small 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, 3Heart-small 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 5Heart-small, 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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