China v The Netherlands |
Orbis Venice Cup -
Quartefinal 4 |
China led by
24 IMPs at the half-way stage of their quarter-final match with the
Netherlands. The final set of the day was an important one. If China
could add to their lead they would sleep more easily than their opponents.
Board
1. Dealer North. Love All |
|
ª |
Q 10 4 |
|
© |
9 6 5 |
¨ |
— |
§ |
A K Q 8 5 4 3 |
ª |
A 7 5 |
|
ª |
J 8 3 2 |
© |
A Q 10 |
© |
J 7 4 2 |
¨ |
A J 8 6 5 2 |
¨ |
K 10 9 4 |
§ |
J |
§ |
6 |
|
ª |
K 9 6 |
|
© |
K 8 3 |
¨ |
Q 7 3 |
§ |
10 9 7 2 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Yu |
Vriend |
Wang |
van der Pas |
|
1§
|
Pass
|
1NT
|
Dble
|
3§
|
Dble
|
Pass
|
3¨
|
Pass
|
Pass
|
3NT
|
Dble
|
4§
|
Pass
|
Pass
|
Dble
|
All Pass
|
|
|
|
It
looks aggressive to double Four Clubs on the West cards, but no harm
should have been done as the Chinese pair had already given up on the
idea of bidding game themselves. Wenfei Wang led the nine of diamonds,
ruffed by Bep Vriend. Declarer cashed a top club then crossed twice
to dummy in trumps to eliminate the diamonds before leading a low heart.
Should East put in the jack?
On the actual
deal, playing the jack of hearts makes the defense very easy, but imagine
that North holds the heart queen instead of the spade queen. West could
help here, of course, having a series of free plays in diamonds to suggest
which of her majors is the stronger. I am not sure that the Chinese
play a lot of this secondary suit preference and, whether or not she
had this inference available, Wang played low on the heart lead. Vriend
put in dummy's eight and Yu Zhang was endplayed. The winning defense
is to exit with ace and another spade and wait for a second heart lead.
That defense is surely indicated as West should know the shape of the
hand by now. But Zhang played a diamond instead, giving a ruff and discard.
Vriend ruffed in dummy, pitching a heart, then proceeded to get the
spades right to bring home her contract for +510.
West |
North |
East |
South |
van Zwol |
Yalan |
Verbeek |
Gu |
|
2§ |
Pass |
3§ |
3¨
|
5§ |
5¨ |
Dble |
All Pass
|
|
|
|
|
The Precision
Two Club opening added momentum to the auction and Wietske van Zwol
found herself in Five Diamonds Doubled. Yalan Zhang led a top club then
switched to a spade, establishing two winners for the defense. Van Zwol
led a diamond to the king then ran the ten of diamonds. When that held
she continued with the jack of hearts, allowing her to pick up four
tricks in the suit and 11 in all; +550 and 14 IMPs to the Netherlands.
Board
3. Dealer South. EW Game |
|
ª |
K Q 4 |
|
© |
10 7 5 2 |
¨ |
A 10 9 |
§ |
J 7 2 |
ª |
6 3 2 |
|
ª |
A 10 9 7 |
© |
K Q 8 |
© |
9 6 |
¨ |
K 7 6 2 |
¨ |
Q 8 5 3 |
§ |
K Q 4 |
§ |
A 10 6 |
|
ª |
J 8 5 |
|
© |
A J 4 3 |
¨ |
J 4 |
§ |
9 8 5 3 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Yu |
Vriend |
Wang |
van der Pas |
|
|
|
Pass |
1¨
|
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT
|
Pass |
3¨ |
All Pass |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
van Zwol |
Yalan |
Verbeek |
Gu |
|
|
|
Pass |
1¨
|
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT
|
All Pass |
|
|
|
One No Trump
proved to be a much more comfortable contract than Three Diamonds, where
there were no useful ruffs out. Zhang lost a heart, two spades and two
trumps to go one down in Three Diamonds; -100. Meanwhile, the defense
led two rounds of hearts against One Trump. Van Zwol played a diamond
to the queen and a second diamond, ducked. The hearts were cleared and
she cleared the diamonds, ending up with an overtrick; +120 and 6 IMPs
to the Netherlands.
Board
7. Dealer South. Game All |
|
ª |
K 9 4 |
|
© |
A J 8 |
¨ |
A Q 3 |
§ |
K 10 6 2 |
ª |
Q J 10 8 7 6 5 3 2 |
|
ª |
A |
© |
Q |
© |
9 6 5 4 3 |
¨ |
8 4 |
¨ |
K J 7 5 |
§ |
5 |
§ |
9 8 3 |
|
ª |
— |
|
© |
K 10 7 2 |
¨ |
10 9 6 2 |
§ |
A Q J 7 4 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Yu |
Vriend |
Wang |
van der Pas |
|
|
|
Pass |
4ª
|
Dble |
Pass |
5§ |
All Pass
|
|
|
|
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
van Zwol |
Yalan |
Verbeek |
Gu |
|
In some matches,
South opened the bidding, leading to a quite different problem. Now,
what would you do as South when partner doubles the Four Spade opening?
Obviously, it depends on whether the double is for penalties or is take-out
or optional. It appears that it was basically for penalties as far as
Gu was concerned. She passed but the penalty was an inadequate +200.
If you are going
to remove the double, do you bid a simple Five Clubs, Four No Trump
to show two or more places to play, or are you more optimistic. It helps
if you have an agreement that bidding shows a realistic hope of making
your contract - in other words, a flat yarborough passes and hopes to
beat Four Spades. Playing that way Five Clubs is sufficient as a lot
of the time that slam is on partner will be able to bid it. Five Clubs
was the choice of Marijke van der Pas. When she made an overtrick, she
may have been mildly worried that slam would be reached in the other
room, but if so she need not have worried. +620 was worth 9 IMPs to
the Dutch, who had moved into the lead.
Board
12. Dealer West. NS Game |
|
ª |
9 7 |
|
© |
A Q 8 2 |
¨ |
A J 7 4 3 |
§ |
8 2 |
ª |
A 4 |
|
ª |
K J 10 6 5 3 2 |
© |
K 10 4 3 |
© |
6 5 |
¨ |
K Q 9 2 |
¨ |
6 |
§ |
A J 3 |
§ |
9 5 4 |
|
ª |
Q 8 |
|
© |
J 9 7 |
¨ |
10 8 5 |
§ |
K Q 10 7 6 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Yu |
Vriend |
Wang |
van der Pas |
1NT
|
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
4ª
|
All Pass |
|
|
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
van Zwol |
Yalan |
Verbeek |
Gu |
1NT
|
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
2ª
|
All Pass |
|
|
|
What would
be your choice when partner opens One No Trump? Both openings showed
15-17, so the swing was a matter of player judgement rather than system.
A club lead made it very easy to hold the two contracts to nine tricks.
That was +140 for Van Zwol, but -50 for Yu Zhang; 5 IMPs to the Netherlands.
Board
15. Dealer South. NS Game |
|
ª |
10 8 |
|
© |
K 4 3 |
¨ |
Q 7 4 |
§ |
Q J 6 5 4 |
ª |
A K 9 5 4 |
|
ª |
6 |
© |
9 7 |
© |
Q 10 |
¨ |
J 9 8 |
¨ |
A 10 6 5 3 2 |
§ |
A 9 3 |
§ |
K 10 7 2 |
|
ª |
Q J 7 3 2 |
|
© |
A J 8 6 5 2 |
¨ |
K |
§ |
8 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Yu |
Vriend |
Wang |
van der Pas |
|
|
|
1ª |
Pass
|
1NT |
2¨ |
2© |
3¨
|
Pass |
Pass |
3© |
All Pass
|
|
|
|
|
Van der Pas
bid three times with her shapely hand and that proved to be the winning
thing to do. Zhang led the eight of diamonds against Three Hearts and
Wang won the ace and switched to her spade. Zhang won and cashed a second
spade then led a third round without cashing the ace of clubs. Van der
Pas ruffed with dummy's king and took her club pitch on the diamond
queen. Then she played a heart and, fearing that a losing finesse could
be followed by a spade over-ruff, played ace and another, thereby holding
herself to nine tricks; +140.
West |
North |
East |
South |
van Zwol |
Yalan |
Verbeek |
Gu |
|
|
|
1©
|
1ª
|
2©
|
Pass
|
Pass
|
Dble
|
Pass
|
3¨
|
3©
|
Pass
|
Pass
|
4§
|
Pass
|
4¨
|
All Pass
|
|
|
|
In the other
room, the Dutch pair competed to Four Diamonds. The defense need to
cash their heart tricks if they are to defeat this contract. When Gu
led her singleton club, Martine Verbeek could win the jack with her
king, cash the ace of diamonds, then play two top spades to pitch a
heart. She now reverted to playing trumps and just lost a diamond, a
heart and a club; +130 and 7 IMPs to the Netherlands.
The set score
was 55-1 to the Netherlands with one board to play. Finally, there was
some joy for the Chinese team.
Board
16. Dealer West. EW Game |
|
ª |
Q 10 9 |
|
© |
7 4 |
¨ |
A K Q J 6 4 |
§ |
K Q |
ª |
A K 8 5 2 |
|
ª |
7 6 4 |
© |
K J 3 |
© |
A 8 5 2 |
¨ |
2 |
¨ |
7 5 3 |
§ |
8 6 5 4 |
§ |
J 3 2 |
|
ª |
J 3 |
|
© |
Q 10 9 6 |
¨ |
10 9 8 |
§ |
A 10 9 7 |
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Yu |
Vriend |
Wang |
van der Pas |
1ª
|
2¨ |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass
|
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
Had Wang led
a spade, Zhang would have had to do very well to win and find the hearts
switch. Ducking a spade works whenever partner gets in before declarer
has nine tricks, for example if her high card is a diamond stopper.
But Zhang was not put to the test. Wang found the great lead of a low
heart. When her jack won, Zhang cashed two top spades, Vriend desperately
following with the ten and queen. But Zhang was not to be fooled. She
played the king then three of hearts and the contract was one down;
-50.
West |
North |
East |
South |
van Zwol |
Yalan |
Verbeek |
Gu |
1ª
|
1NT |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass
|
2¨ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass
|
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
The auction
at this table made it even tougher to find the killing defense. Verbeek
made the normal lead of a spade and, not suspecting that declarer had
such an impressive source of ready tricks, van Zwol won and returned
a low spade. Yalan Zhang had 11 tricks for +460 and 11 IMPs to China,
who needed them.
Despite this
wing, the Netherlands had won the set by 55-12 and moved into a 19 IMP
lead with 32 boards to play.