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Tales of Akarana 3
The Lure of the Vulnerable Game.
It’s Teams. We’re vulnerable. We have enough high card points to make game a possibility. Should we therefore go for gold? It seems many of us tried at the wrong time on this evening.
So, a couple of bidding situations. Firstly, your partner blesses you with a pre-empt in your singleton suit. What to do?
Board 18.
West North East South
Pass 3
Pass ?
The North hand is: T95 AKQ96 2 AK42
with just your side vulnerable.
Then, some competition for you:
Board 21.
West North East South
1 2 2
3 ?
and again, with just your side vulnerable, you hold:
QJT64 764 AK4 AJ
It grieves me to say that on the first hand above, the winning action was,probably, to pass 3. Let’s look:
Board 18 East Deals N-S Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
Pass | 3 ♦ | ||
Pass | 3 ♥ | Pass | 4 ♥ |
All pass |
This was despite the fact that East had a very normal Q lead against 4. A declarer could win and try a diamond finesse or else could try to ruff both clubs in dummy, relying on the 10 to come down in three rounds.
In the first case, the finesse failed and there was no free pitch on the A as North would suffer a ruff. The bad diamond break defeated 4 as well if declarer tried to ruff two clubs as the only way back to the North hand was via a diamond ruff.
Another option would be for South to bid 3NT after North’s bid. The defence should succeed after either a club or heart lead.
A pre-empt can be a warning as in the above deal. Even a couple of most valuable major honours in the pre-emptor’s hand was not enough for either game to succeed legitimately. There must, though, come a point where you just have to bid after partner’s pre-empt. Give North a sixth heart here and it is surely mandatory. As nice as that North hand is, not only is one’s singleton in the wrong suit but also a likely game of 3NT requires the pre-emptor to have something reasonable in spades, making game pretty tenuous despite partner’s second in hand vulnerable against not opening.
What, though, of 3?
One would rather fail in the pursuit of game rather than in the pursuit of part-score. On the above lie of the cards, even 3 is in danger, especially after a spade lead. Had the diamond finesse worked, 4 and even 3NT would start to look like fair contracts. Yet, pass still may be the winning choice. Of the 8 tables, four tried 4 , one 3NT and one 3. Only 4 was successful, twice. That surely brings in the human factor, that defence can be pretty tough. If you are not there, you cannot make it.
That last statement must ring true in the ears of 7 of the 8 North-South pairs in the second question given, Board 21. A reminder of the bidding thus far:
West North East South
1 2 2
3 ?
and again, with just your side vulnerable, you hold:
QJT64 764 AK4 AJ
Your options are:
Pass. Surely unthinkable with a handy 15 count?
3. Just competitive.
x Game try in spades.
Your partner would surely have accepted your game try as they had a heart void:
Board 21 North Deals N-S Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
1 ♠ | 2 ♥ | 2 ♠ | |
3 ♥ | 3 ♠ | 4 ♥ | 4 ♠ |
All pass |
With East on lead to 4, the likely lead is a heart. Declarer can thus ruff all three hearts in dummy before taking the diamond finesse and drawing trumps..an overtrick! Even the outstanding lead of the K followed by two more rounds of the suit does not bother North as long as they unblock to win the third round in the South hand, to be followed by a diamond finesse and two heart discards on the long diamonds.
It was rather handy that the 9 was doubleton or else declarer would be an entry short to dummy after the trump lead. Yet, that rather sums up the logic of bidding thin vulnerable games. You either need a bit of luck or perhaps a misdefence. The sizable reward makes the times you go minus worthwhile.
So, this time we can report that just one of the eight pairs reached 4. Everyone else defended hearts at the 2,3 or 4 levels. Perhaps North opened a strong no-trump. So much then for spades being the boss suit. If they are rebiddable (and the above one is, just), then say you have 5 of them if you can.
I wonder if there is any coincidence that Michael Courtney was one of the declarers in the first example who bid and made 4 (with a little defensive help) and who was the only declarer in 4 in the second. He seemed to get more value, and imps, out of these two hands than any other North player.
Richard Solomon