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The Dougal McLean Trophy Goes Home to Wellington
Wellington has ended Auckland-Northland’s recent dominance of the Dougal Mclean competition by winning the supreme award at this year’s Inter-Provincials in Dunedin. This was the 9th year of the event. Wellington won the first time the trophy was contested. Since then, Auckland-Northland have won it 6 times, a run only broken by one Canterbury win in 2013. I can see a warm smile and a little twinkle in Dougal’s eye at his home region’s success this time.
It was a close-run thing. Wellington and Auckland-Northland each won two of the four categories with Wellington’s all-round performance just beating that of their Northern rivals:
Dougal Maclean results:
- Wellington 40
- Auckland/Northland 38
- Otago/Southland 28
- Central Districts 24
- Waikato Bays 22
- Canterbury 16
- Top of the South 4
Wellington's Women Win
Perhaps the biggest surprise was in the Women’s competition where Wellington has not featured strongly in recent years. This year, both the Auckland-Northland and Waikato Bays teams were full of international pairs and players. With one round out of 14 to go, Wellington had the lead but only by 3.16vps over Waikato Bays and 6.59 vps over Auckland-Northland. Wellington had to play Waikato Bays and seemed not just to have to win but to win well as Auckland-Northland were playing a Canterbury side who had lost their previous 6 matches.
Auckland-Northland posted 16.18 which gave Wellington the luxury of being able to suffer a very small loss. However, they won in style, 15.37 to take the title by nearly 6 vps.
- Wellington 144.45
- Auckland-Northland 138.67
- Waikato Bays 130.55
Congratulations to Sandra Coleman- Mindy Wu and Joan McCarthy- Joan Waldvogel.
The winning chef de mission, Nigel Kearney with three Auckland-Northland's winning Seniors' team: Allan Morris
members of the winning Wellington Women's team, Neil Stuckey, Barry Palmer and Beverley Morris
Sandra Coleman, Joan McCarthy and Joan Waldvogel
(missing is Mindy Wu)
Auckland Northland Retain Seniors' Trophy
The Seniors competition looked with three rounds to go as though it could be a close battle. However, Auckland-Northland produced the goods when it really mattered, averaging 17 with three big wins, over their main rivals, Canterbury, Wellington and Otago-Southland, to win with a great degree of comfort:
- Auckland- Northland 146.82
- Canterbury 126.64
- Otago- Southland 123.02
Congratulations to Bev and Allan Morris, Neil Stuckey and Barry Palmer.
Capital Intermediates
Wellington’s most emphatic performance was in the Intermediate event. They recorded 9 wins and 3 losses but only one loss of more than 3 imps. With one round left, they could not be caught. The final scores were:
- Wellington 162.57
- Waikato Bays 140.62
- Central Districts 118.88
Well done to Chris Collins- Sam Ward and Nan Wehipeihana – Julia Barnett.
Chris Collins Sam Ward
Open Trophy stays up North
Auckland- Northland fielded a strong Open team, featuring one of the pairs who won in 2015, Steve Boughey- Andrew Tarbutt who were playing with Jonathan Westoby-Michael Cornell. They were kept “honest” in particular by Wellington, with both teams winning 10 out of 12 though Auckland-Northland won big and could afford two losses to their only two serious challengers in the last two rounds and still emerge as comfortable winners.
- Auckland-Northland 164.39
- Wellington 151.41
- Otago-Southland 145.86
Auckland-Northland's Open winners, Andrew Tarbutt, Stephen Boughey, Nan Wehipeihana and Julia Barnett
Michael Cornell and Jonathan Westoby Intermediate winners from Wellington
However, it was in scoring two first place, one second place and one fifth place that got Wellington the precious Dougal Maclean trophy.
A Bold Switch
A small piece of the action. In the first round match between Auckland and Wellington, both East-West pairs bid up to 5 after their opponents had bid and supported spades. This is what both North players saw as they led the A at trick 1.
Board 24 West Deals None Vul |
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When Steve Boughey was North (for Auckland-Northland), he found the excellent underlead of the AK at trick 2 and his partner, Andrew Tarbutt, gave Steve a ruff with his only other diamond to defeat the contract. The Wellington North player continued at trick 2 with a high spade, after which the contract was cold.
Board 24 West Deals None Vul |
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At one down, 5 was a very cheap "insurance" sacrifice unless you could find Steve and Andrew’s defence to beat 5.
Cornell Class
There is no-one in the field of 112 players with as much experience as Michael Cornell. How would you handle these East cards?
976542
Q9
76
AK5
Your partner opens a 15-17 1NT and the opponents are silent. What is your plan?
Michael had one, a very good one. He transferred to spades and then..bid 3NT, pretending he held only a 5 card spade suit. His partner, Jonathan Westoby, held 3 spades but in a flat hand and elected to pass 3NT, a great decision:
Board 20 West Deals Both Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
1 NT | Pass | 2 ♥ | Pass |
2 ♠ | Pass | 3 NT | All pass |
When North started with a low heart, Jonathan had a claim for 10 tricks. Meanwhile, a couple of AKs defeated 4 in the other room. Many of the defending pairs found it hard to cash four tricks against spade contracts but no other East-West pair out of the 24 who held these cards found the 100% cold 3NT contract.
Although there were some travel issues surrounding this year’s event, the general feeling was that the event had been very well run, including in the catering department. The directng and scoring staff, host region and club should feel a job very well done.
Richard Solomon