France vs South Africa
Venice Cup Quarter-final
1
If there was a surprise qualifier in the Venice Cup then it was
South Africa. They started their quarter-final match with France
16 IMPs down, courtesy of a heavy defeat in the round robin match
between the two teams.
The first set of the quarter-final started quietly and the score
had only reached 7-2 to France after seven deals. Then South Africa
took the lead in the set:
Board 8. Dealer West. None Vul.
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|
ª Q 10 4 2
© A Q 4
¨ K 6 5 2
§ 9 5 |
ª K J 5
© 9 3
¨ J 10 7 4 3
§ A 8 7 |
|
ª 9 6 3
© K 8
¨ A Q 9 8
§ K Q 10 6 |
|
ª A 8 7
© J 10 7 6 5 2
¨ -
§ J 4 3 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Mansell |
D'Ovidio |
Modlin |
Bessis |
Pass |
Pass |
1§ |
Pass |
1¨ |
Pass |
2¨ |
2© |
2ª |
3© |
Pass |
Pass |
4¨ |
All Pass |
|
|
West |
North |
East |
South |
Willard |
Swartz |
Cronier |
Fihrer |
Pass |
Pass |
1¨ |
2© |
3¨ |
3© |
All Pass |
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Joan Fihrer came in immediately with the South hand and a simple
competitive auction led to her declaring 3©. Though the heart finesse
failed, the favourable spade position meant that nine tricks were
not a problem; +140.
Veronique Bessis only introduced her hearts at her second turn.
Catherine D'Ovidio competed to 3©, but Petra Mansell was in a bidding
mood and competed aggressively to 4¨. D'Ovidio led a low trump and
Mansell put in the queen then led a spade to the jack and queen.
Back came the nine of clubs, covered all round, and Mansell drew
the missing trumps with the aid of repeated finesses. Next she cashed
the clubs and, on the last one, bared her king of spades, before
exiting with a spade. Mansell had convinced herself that the two
major-suit aces were offside and she was hoping for some defensive
error. Well, she got one to allow her to recover when both aces
were actually onside. Had D'Ovidio kept two spades, she would have
had the ª10 for the last trick, but she bared it to keep two hearts
and had to give the last trick to the ©K; +130 and 7 IMPs to South
Africa.
Board 9. Dealer North. E/W Vul.
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|
ª K 5 2
© A 8 4
¨ Q J 10 7 3 2
§ Q |
ª A 10
© K 10 9 6 2
¨ 8 6 4
§ 10 9 7 |
|
ª Q 9 8 6 3
© Q
¨ A K
§ K J 6 4 3 |
|
ª J 7 4
© J 7 5 3
¨ 9 5
§ A 8 5 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Mansell |
D'Ovidio |
Modlin |
Bessis |
|
1¨ |
2¨ |
Pass |
3§ |
All Pass |
|
|
In the Closed Room, Benedicte Cronier overcalled 1ª and was left
to play there, making nine tricks for +140. In the Open Room, Merle
Modlin made a two -suited overcall, showing the black suits, and
Mansell played in the 5-3 club fit on the lead of the queen of diamonds.
She won and played the ©Q to the ace and back came a second diamond.
I would have expected declarer to play two rounds of spades now
but Mansell instead tried a low club off the dummy, her ten losing
to the queen. It looked as though Mansell was in trouble now but
she recovered well. D'Ovidio played a diamond and Mansell ruffed
high in dummy, Bessis pitching a spade. Mansell played ace and another
spade to D'Ovidio's king and back came a heart to the jack and king.
Mansell cashed three hearts and threw all dummy's spades away, then
ruffed the last heart with dummy's jack and finessed her §7; just
made for +110 but 1 IMP to France.
Board 11. Dealer South. None Vul.
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|
ª K Q 9 8 6
© Q J 5 3
¨ 3
§ J 10 9 |
ª J 5 3
© 10 9 8 2
¨ 7 2
§ Q 8 7 4 |
|
ª A 7
© A K 6 4
¨ A 9
§ A K 6 5 2 |
|
ª 10 4 2
© 7
¨ K Q J 10 8 6 5 4
§ 3 |
Pre-empting to the limit paid off in a big way on this deal. In
the Closed Room, Joan Fihrer opened only 3¨
on the South cards - would 4¨
have been natural? - and the French pair coped effortlessly with
the pressure. Cronier doubled in fourth seat and cuebid 4¨
over Sylvie Willard's 3©
response. When Willard could only sign off in 4©,
Cronier called it a day; +420.
On vugraph, Bessis opened 4¨ and that ran round to Modlin, who
doubled.. It was impossible for a player who had made a fourth-seat
double to pass her partner's 4© response - after all, two queens
could be sufficient to produce a playable slam - and Modlin went
on with a 5¨ cuebid. Mansell signed off in 5© at just under the
speed of light and played there on a diamond lead. She won the ace
of diamonds, cashed the ace of hearts, then thought for a few seconds
and, with a visible shrug, continued with the king of hearts. Declarer
could eventually ruff the diamond loser in hand but had to lose
two trumps and a spade for down one; -50 and 10 IMPs to France.
Board 14. Dealer East. None Vul.
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|
ª Q J 8
© 10 7 6
¨ K Q J 10 8 6 5
§ - |
ª A 5 3 2
© 9 5 3 2
¨ A 7
§ Q 3 2 |
|
ª 9 7
© A Q 4
¨ 9 4 3 2
§ K 10 8 6 |
|
ª K 10 6 4
© K J 8
¨ -
§ A J 9 7 5 4 |
Fihrer/Swartz played a peaceful 2¨, making nine tricks for +110.
Bessis/D'Ovidio were more optimistic, bidding the North/South cards:
1§ - 1¨ - 1ª - 3¨ - 3NT, where we believe 3¨ to have been forcing.
Mansell led the five of hearts.
Everything lies very favourably for declarer but the defence has
one chance to break the contract. If East rises with the ace of
hearts and sees the fall of the eight from declarer, she should
be able to read her partner's lead as being from four small cards.
A heart return is not good enough as the defence can only come to
three aces plus the long heart. However, what if East switches to
a low club.? Declarer cannot rise with the ace as the defence can
then cash two clubs to go with their three aces, so she must put
in the nine or jack. So West will win the queen of clubs and can
now switch back to hearts for an eventual one down.
Alas, Modlin did not pass the first hurdle because she put in the
queen at trick one and Bessis won the king. She played a spade to
the queen then the ¨K, pitching a club as Mansell won. Mansell did
the best she could by switching to a low club for the king and ace
then went up with the ace on Bessis's low spade play and led the
two of hearts to the ace. Declarer was favourite to get it right
if Modlin returned a club now but in practice she played a heart
and Bessis had the rest for +430 and 8 IMPs to France.
Bessis/D'Ovidio bid and made a vulnerable game
on the next board, missed at the other table, and the set ended
with France ahead by 55-11, including the carry-over score.
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