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Kiwis on The Coast
4 MAN/ 6 MAN?
There has been a lot said over the years about the merits of a 6 person against a 4 person team in a long bridge event. The final of the Gold Coast Teams will add more fuel to the fire. Congratulations to the team of Andy Hung, Kornel Lazar, our own Michael Whibley, Roger Lee, Liam Milne and Nye Griffiths who beat their four person opponents Vainikonis 145-27 with only 36 of the 48 boards played. Vainikonis had been the 2nd best team throughout the 214 team event (a pretty fair achievement) but collapsed in the final. Bad luck? Maybe some but one has to wonder at what the real cause of the size of that defeat was…and that takes nothing away from the performance of the winners.
Michael Whibley, winning Kiwi
Ivy Dahler Butler Swiss Pairs.
These are the final results after the 10 completed rounds, New Zealand players in the top 20.
Congratulations to Matthew Brown on his first place East-West in the Open.
Open 104 pairs each direction.
North/South
6th Michael Courtney with Sue Ingham 132.95
9th Wayne Burrows – Peter Hall 127.68
17th Carol De Luca- Bev Henton 118.75
East-West
1st Matthew Brown with Jessica Brake 129.28
6th Jenna Gibbons with Julian Foster 120.68
10th George Sun – Alice Young 117.76
12th John and David Skipper 117.23
17th Lyn Muller – Sarah Green 115.20
19th Peer Bach – Setsuko Lichtnecker 114.15
Intermediate (94 pairs)
9th Derek Snelling – Isobel Ross 123.59
14th Tony Jiang – Julia Zhu 118.76
17th Mary Driesbock- Vivienne Sexton 115.72
20th Max Robb – Gwyneth Hopkins 114.23
Restricted (90 pairs)
3rd Kathy and John Hamilton 129.24
6th Gail Tippett – Paul Maxwell 127.98
9th Marsha Woodbury – Virginia Warren 120.94
12th Eileen Boocock – Philip Hassall 117.85
20th Jenni Borren – Margaret Robbie 111.48
Downgrade Upgrade Revisited
A couple of days ago, we saw how a player really downgraded his hand and then one bid made him go the other way. Our final hand of the week shows the same scenario:
Holding AT9762 - A73 KQ95, Fuxia Wen opened 1 and heard partner Ian Berrington bid 2. She made a slightly negative non-forcing 3 bid. Ian jumped to 4 and Fuxia had a rethink. A double fit, a void and good minor cards. She jumped to 6.
West led the 2 (4th highest leads) and this is what Fuxia saw.
She had a certain diamond loser though if the spade finesse worked, she just needed to play clubs for no loser. So, your play to trick1
Seres McMahon Matchpoint Swiss Pairs
Board 11 South Deals None Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
Ian | Fuxia | ||
1 ♠ | |||
Pass | 2 ♣ | Pass | 3 ♣ |
Pass | 4 ♠ | Pass | 6 ♠ |
All pass |
Fuxia decided to play the T which would be fine if West had led from the jack…and kind of fine if not. The only problem was that when the ten lost to the jack, there was only one way to dummy to take that trump finesse…a second round of clubs. Ouch!
Seres McMahon Matchpoint Swiss Pairs
Board 11 South Deals None Vul |
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Rising with the A was the winner at trick one. Unlucky to find that break…or as we say “them’s the breaks”. I am sure that Fuxia and Ian will like many of the 200 + Kiwis will be back for better luck next year.
Richard Solomon
Link to the full results, click here.