Deliverance
By Barry Rigal
It is relatively unusual to take a finesse in the auction, but
even more unusual to reject one. That was what happened to Peter
Weichsel of USA II in his team's 14th round Bermuda Bowl match against
Australia. Weichsel held these cards as East:
ª A 9
© A J 10 8 5 4
¨ A 6
§ A J 10
This was the auction:
West |
North |
East |
South |
1¨
(1) |
3§ |
3© |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
4§ |
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
?? |
|
(1) Precision.
At this point, Weichsel paused, by his estimation, for 10 minutes;
we know him to be a deliberate player. Finally, he bid the heart
slam. This was the full deal:
Board 8. Dealer West. None Vul.
|
|
ª 10 7 6
© 6
¨ Q 7 5
§ K Q 8 4 3 2 |
ª K Q J 3
© Q 3
¨ K 10 8 3 2
§ 9 5 |
|
ª A 9
© A J 10 8 5 4
¨ A 6
§ A J 10 |
|
ª 8 5 4 2
© K 9 7 2
¨ J 9 4
§ 7 6 |
As Weichsel told me, he figured partner Alan Sontag to hold 4-2
in the majors, with 4-2-5-2 the most likely shape, and with 11-13
high-card points. If dummy delivered the expected honour in hearts
and two low clubs, he would be well placed if dummy had the ©K.
He could cash the top hearts and hope to pitch clubs on dummy's
spade winners.
But what if dummy had the ©Q, not the king? Much would depend on
the opening lead. If clubs appeared to be 7-1, Weichsel would simply
finesse in hearts. If, as happened at the table, a high club was
led, he could assume the suit was 6-2. In that case he would win
the §A, cash the ©A and run the spade suit to pitch his club losers.
Assuming North held three spades, Weichsel would succeed if North
had a singleton heart or the doubleton ©K, in which case North would
have to ruff with his trump trick.
And so it proved: Weichsel said that when dummy delivered what
he had expected, the play took no time at all. On the lead of the
§7, Weichsel cashed the ©A, ran four spade tricks and claimed. In
the other room, 4© made plus 420, so this was a 22-IMP swing.
The Bangalore Express
By Manoj Nair - Bangalore,
India
The readers of the Daily News are not merely to be found in Paris.
One of our Indian correspondents emailed his views on a deal reported
in yesterday's edition.
The first deal featured in the bulletin from this match may be
a classic case of if the finesse is right, don't take it.
Board 3. Dealer South. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª A 9 7 5 2
© J 9 2
¨ Q 7 3
§ 8 3 |
ª 4 3
© A Q 8
¨ A K 5 4
§ A 9 5 2 |
|
ª K 10 8 6
© 7 5 3
¨ 10 6
§ K Q J 7 |
|
ª Q J
© K 10 6 4
¨ J 9 8 2
§ 10 6 4 |
Open Room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Abecassis |
Weichsel |
Soulet |
Sontag |
|
|
|
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2§* |
Pass |
2¨ |
Pass |
2NT |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
|
|
With West declaring 3NT trick one comprised the spade 5, 8, J &
4.
At trick two South returned a heart and declarer put in the eight,
then guessing wrong when North played back the seven of spades.
The view from the sub-continent is that declarer's play of the
ten of spades on the seven of spades is very suspect. What holding
did he think the lead was made from?
ªAQ75 or ªAQ752?
No as then the nine would have won the first trick.
ªA9752?
Then the king is the right play.
ªQ975?
Unlikely with the given bidding. Also the six is the right play
to block suit. Then South will be caught in a red suit squeeze on
the run of the clubs.
ªQ9752?
Then the six is the right play.
QUEENS COUNT
By Maureen Dennison
In the first set of the Senior's semi-final, Kit Woolsey found
a quiet defensive play to put declarer, John Onstott, off his stroke.
This was the hand:
Board 10. Dealer East. All Vul.
|
|
ª
Q 6 5
© A K Q 7
¨ Q 6 2
§ 10 7 6 |
ª
K 10 3
© 5 4 2
¨ 5 3
§ A K Q J 9 |
|
ª
A J 9 7
© J 3
¨ K J 10 9 8 7
§ 2 |
|
ª
8 4 2
© 10 9 8 6
¨ A 4
§ 8 5 4 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Hayden |
Woolsey |
Onstott |
Robinson |
|
|
Pass |
Pass |
1§ |
Dble |
1¨ |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2ª |
All Pass |
South led ©10
and Woolsey carefully took with ©K,
cashed the ©A and
switched to a low diamond. Well, of course, with only seven points
in the heart suit, he had to have the diamond ace for his double.
Declarer put up the king - wrong! I know it was only worth 1 IMP
but what a nice way to earn it!
Battle of Wits
By Patrick Jourdain (Wales)
This deal from the Round 13 match between France and Brazil was
a good battle of wits between Multon as declarer and Chagas-Branco
in defence:
Board 19. Dealer South. E/W Vul.
|
|
ª A K 9 8 7 3
© 5 4
¨ A 10 9 8
§ 4 |
ª J 4 2
© A 9 7
¨ K Q J 7 4 3
§ Q |
|
ª Q 6
© K J 10 8 6 3
¨ -
§ K J 8 7 6 |
|
ª 10 5
© Q 2
¨ 6 5 2
§ A 10 9 5 3 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Quantin |
Chagas |
Multon |
Branco |
|
|
|
Pass |
1¨ |
1ª |
2© |
3§ |
4© |
All Pass |
|
|
Branco led the ten of spades and Chagas began
with the king and ace. At many tables North now tried to cash the
ace of diamonds, planning to continue with the third spade. That
plan was short-lived. Chagas avoided this trap continuing at once
with the third spade. Multon solved his immediate problem by ruffing
high and playing a trump to the seven. He then led the king of diamonds
off the table. Chagas knew that if declarer had held a diamond he
would have discarded it on the third spade, so he smoothly played
low. Multon, taken in, ruffed the diamond, crossed to dummy drawing
trumps and then led the queen of clubs.
If South wins this he is endplayed, forced to
set up an extra trick for declarer in one of the minors. So Branco
did very well when he allowed dummy's bare queen to hold. Now Multon
was at the crossroads. He had nine obvious tricks, and there may
have been a hitch from South that gave away the position of the
ace of clubs. So, although he had earlier placed the ace of diamonds
with South Multon now decided to make a loser-on-loser play of leading
the queen of diamonds and when Chagas played low again, he threw
a losing club from hand.
When the diamond held Multon was home.
|