| Getting even After the fifth set of their match with Norway in the Bermuda Bowl 
              semi-final, the Italians were back on their heels, having seen Norway 
              come from 52 IMPs down to only 14 with 16 boards to play. Would 
              Norway prevail, as they did in the Bermuda Bowl semi-final in Paris 
              two years ago?  It literally was not in the cards for the Norwegians, as a flat 
              set of boards gave them little to work with, while the two Italian 
              pairs played nearly error-free bridge on the way to a 31-9 win and 
              a berth in the championship round. The second deal gave 5 IMPs to Italy. 
             
              
                | Board 18. Dealer East. N/S 
                    Vul. |  
|  | ª 10 5 © A J 8
 ¨ Q 10 5
 § A J 10 8 4
 |  ª K Q 8 7 6 © 10 9 7 6 4 2
 ¨ -
 § 7 5
 |  | ª J 9 © Q
 ¨ A K 9 8 7 3 2
 § K Q 6
 | 
|  | ª A 4 3 2 © K 5 3
 ¨ J 6 4
 § 9 3 2
 |  
             
               
                | West | North | East | South |   
                | Duboin | Saelensminde | Bocchi | Brogeland |   
                |  |  | 1¨ | Pass |   
                | 1© | Pass | 3¨ | All Pass |  Giorgio Duboin was not inclined to try to improve the contract 
              with his scant values. The contract could have been defeated if 
              the defenders never led clubs, but Norberto Bocchi did manage nine 
              tricks for plus 110. 
             
               
                | West | North | East | South |   
                | Helgemo | Lauria | Helness | Versace |   
                |  |  | 1¨ | Pass |   
                | 1ª | Pass | 3¨ | Pass |   
                | 3© | Pass | 3NT | Pass |   
                | 4© | Pass | 4ª | All Pass |  
              That’s a lot of bidding with no fit and a paucity of high-card 
              points. Lorenzo Lauria started with the §A, 
              continuing with the §J 
              to the king. Geir Helgemo played the ©Q 
              to Lauria’s ace, and the ¨Q 
              was returned. Helgemo discarded three hearts on the top diamonds 
              and §Q, ruffed a 
              diamond to hand and ruffed his next-to-last heart in dummy. He needed 
              some luck in the trump suit (the ªA 
              10 with South, for example), but he didn’t get it. When Helgemo 
              played a good diamond from dummy, Alfredo Versace ruffed low. Helgemo 
              overruffed with a low spot, but Lauria was there with the ª10. 
              The trump return left Helgemo with a second heart loser and minus 
              100. That was only 5 IMPs to Italy, but it was Norway who needed 
              the swings.
                |  |  |  
                |  | Erik Saelensminde, 
                    Norway |   They simply weren’t coming. Whenever Boye Brogeland and 
              Erik Saelensminde tried to create action in the closed room, Bocchi 
              and Duboin simply passed and took their plus scores.  At one point, there were four pushes in a row, not what Norway 
              needed for the win. This was a tough one for Norway. 
             
              
                | Board 23. Dealer South. All 
                    Vul. |  
|  | ª Q J 10 4 2 © Q 9 6 3 2
 ¨ 2
 § 5 4
 |  ª A 8 5 © J 8
 ¨ Q J 8 6 5
 § J 10 2
 |  | ª 7 6 3 © K 5 4
 ¨ K 10 3
 § A K Q 7
 | 
|  | ª K 9 © A 10 7
 ¨ A 9 7 4
 § 9 8 6 3
 |  
             
               
                | West | North | East | South |   
                | Duboin | Saelensminde | Bocchi | Brogeland |   
                |  |  |  | Pass |   
                | Pass | 1ª | Dble | Redbl |   
                | 2¨ | 2© | Pass | Pass |   
                | Dble | Pass | 2ª | Pass |   
                | 2NT | Pass | 3NT | All Pass |  Saelensminde lead a low heart, and there was no stopping the notrump 
              game as it was South with the ace, not North. The Italians easily 
              scored up plus 630 despite Saelensminde’s opening and free 
              bid with 4 HCP. 
             
               
                | West | North | East | South |   
                | Helgemo | Lauria | Helness | Versace |   
                |  |  |  | 1§ |   
                | 1¨ | 2¨ | Dble | Pass |   
                | Pass | 2ª | 3¨ | All Pass |  All the bidding with scant values did seem to slow down Helgemo 
              and Helness, who settled for the diamond partial, which was an 11-IMP 
              gain for Italy, looking more and more solid as the match wore on.  The following deal was a small gain for Italy, but it showed how 
              things were going for Norway. 
             
              
                | Board 25. Dealer North. E/W 
                    Vul. |  
|  | ª 5 2 © J 10 9 7 6
 ¨ 4
 § Q 10 4 3 2
 |  ª 9 7 6 © 8 3
 ¨ A 8 2
 § K 9 8 7 5
 |  | ª A Q 10 © A Q 5 4 2
 ¨ Q J 7 6
 § 6
 | 
|  | ª K J 8 4 3 © K
 ¨ K 10 9 5 3
 § A J
 |  
             
               
                | West | North | East | South |   
                | Duboin | Saelensminde | Bocchi | Brogeland |   
                |  | 2© | Pass | Pass |   
                | Pass |  |  |  |  South, looking at his own cards, must have liked his partner’s 
              chances in 2©, but Saelensminde managed only five tricks for minus 
              150. 
             
               
                | West | North | East | South |   
                | Helgemo | Lauria | Helness | Versace |   
                |  |  | 1© | 3§ |   
                | Pass | 3ª | All Pass |  |  Versace’s 3§ showed a two-suiter with diamonds and spades. 
              Lauria did well to go off one for minus 100, but it was still 2 
              IMPs to Italy, who were pitching a shutout until late in the match. 
              By then, it was too late for Norway, whose medal hopes had turned 
              from gold to bronze. |