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The bulk of this month's news is a Grand National Teams update. Other events in New England bridge are briefly covered far below. District 25 Grand National Teams Update
On Saturday, March 8, 2008, at the Westwood Bridge Club in
Westwood, MA (west of Boston), I kibitzed the Grand National Teams
district finals for Flight B, between the Margolin team of
(left to right in the picture) Although I've been reporting GNT finals for several years, I haven't done a Flight B writeup lately. I thank the eight players for being good sports and letting me watch and put their bidding sequences and card plays under my magnifying glass. I will call attention to noteworthy actions and missed opportunities, which I hope won't disconcert anybody. Sorry to sound elitist, but readers won't see quite the quality of bidding and play that I reported, for example, in last year's district championship flight final. Remember, all these players had to play well just to have the opportunity to compete in this match and have their bridge reported. I hope Flight B GNT finalist teams in future years won't shy away from being subjects of one of these writeups for fear I'll be too harsh on them. I'd also like to thank everybody who commented on the first draft and helped me fix the annoying errata which plague bridge reporting. Any remaining errors are my own typing or analysis mistakes.Anderson-McDevitt, Margolin-Jones, and Willey-Popiel all play standard, more or less. Dyer-Cable play 10-12 notrumps. Their minor suit openings promise only two cards, because on balanced hands, they open 1D with 13-14 and 1C with 15-17. By mutual agreement the two swingiest pairs, Dyer-Cable due to system, and Willey-Popiel due to personality, played against each other throughout. My watcher chose to kibitz that "wild" table, while I got stuck recording a parade of one-level contracts at the "dull" table of McDevitt-Anderson vs. Margolin-Jones. Nevertheless, there were deals of interest. Board 1 (none vul, N deals):
North
S-KQJ432
West H-J9 East
S- D-94 S-A986
H-Q108642 C-J54 H-A5
D-AKJ D-Q8753
C-AK109 South C-72
S-1075
H-K73
D-1062
C-Q863
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - 2S P
3S 4H P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - 2S P
P 3H P 3NT
P P P
McDevitt guessed trumps for 480. Popiel,
without trumps, ducked spades twice, ran
his diamonds, and eventually scored 430 to lose
2 imps. Board 2 (NS vul, East deals):
North
S-Q9742
West H-J87 East
S-J653 D-Q62 S-8
H-1095 C-K5 H-A632
D-J83 D-A104
C-964 South C-AJ1083
S-AK10
H-KQ4
D-K975
C-Q72
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1C
1NT P 2H(*) P
2S P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 1C
P P 1S P
2C P 2S P
3S P 4S P
P P
Jones's 1NT overcall was full value, and he
was always making two spades after the transfer.
The club lead ran to his queen, and James
cashed the spade AK and ran the 10. Anderson erred by
discarding a club. So, when Doug won his HA
and tapped dummy out with clubs,
he had only one club remaining to cash when he
got back in with the diamond ace, and Jones made an overtrick.
Cable passed over 1C, lying in the weeds, but
came to life over Dyer's balance. Matthew
stretched for a vulnerable game, but even though
he played from the side protected from the
tap, there was no tenth trick after a passive
lead of the spade 8. Down one, and against good defense
he couldn't have made 3NT either, with insufficient
entries and the spades blocked. Six imps to
Margolin, who led 6-2. Board 3 (EW vul, South deals):
North
S-KJ106
West H-A986 East
S-Q53 D-A96 S-A87
H-QJ54 C-107 H-
D-QJ2 D-K743
C-J84 South C-KQ9652
S-942
H-K10732
D-1085
C-A3
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P P 1D 2C
P P Double P
2H P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P P 1NT 3C
P P P
Popiel jumped to a cold 3C over Dyer's mini
notrump. South led a heart, so Jan
could have scored an
overtrick by eventually setting up diamonds
to pitch one of dummy's spades, but he settled for
making three. At the other table, if Jones had won the club lead
and taken a spade finesse, or laid down
the trump king and then finessed in either major,
he could eventually make his 2H.
But James played a heart to dummy's ace. East
obnoxiously showed out, and James no longer had
entries to get spades going in time, nor could
he avoid two trump losers. The best he could do
after this start was to exit repeatedly in the minors,
forcing Anderson-McDevitt to break a major at the end. Down
one, but that was still two imps to
Margolin, who led 8-2.
Board 4 (Both vul, West deals):
North
S-AJ864
West H-J93 East
S-K732 D-83 S-Q109
H-K7654 C-A54 H-Q10
D-J107 D-AKQ95
C-2 South C-987
S-5
H-A82
D-642
C-KQJ1063
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P P 1D
2C Double 2S P
3C P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P 1NT P
3C P P 3D
P P P
To beat 3C, West must lead a trump on
the go. McDevitt led a mundane DJ for
-110. Cable led her singleton spade
against Jan Popiel's 3D, so he never had
a chance. Lorraine scored two ruffs
for down one and a push.
Board 5 (NS vul, North deals):
North
S-J8
West H-9753 East
S-KQ1095 D-A973 S-642
H-AKQ C-QJ7 H-1062
D-K8 D-Q1065
C-842 South C-K105
S-A73
H-J84
D-J42
C-A963
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - P P
P 1S P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P P
P 1S P 2S
P 4S P P
P
If Jan Popiel is going to raise with
this weak an East hand, Richard Willey can't
afford to jump to game with the West cards.
The Norths led their CQ, and both declarers
guessed trumps for nine tricks, but Willey-Popiel
had contracted for ten, so five
imps went to Cable, who trailed 8-7.
Board 6 (EW vul, East deals):
North
S-A102
West H-65 East
S-Q D-AQ74 S-K7
H-AKQ8 C-J642 H-943
D-K1062 D-J9853
C-A753 South C-1098
S-J986543
H-J1072
D-
C-KQ
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - P
P 1H P P
2S P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - P
P 1NT P P
2S P P P
Those West cards are awkward in many systems. McDevitt
tried a four card major, Willey an off-shape notrump.
It didn't matter as this was South's deal for 140. Push.
Board 7 (Both vul, South deals):
North
S-9
West H-9 East
S-1063 D-Q10752 S-Q874
H-KQ8 C-KQ8762 H-A7643
D-AK864 D-J3
C-54 South C-J10
S-AKJ52
H-J1052
D-9
C-A93
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
1S P 1NT P
2H P 3C P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
1S 2D P P
Double P P P
North-South are off five top tricks in notrump,
but double-dummy, they can make 5C by taking a
spade finesse. That's hard to bid and hard to
play, so Barry Margolin's 130 in 3C would be about an average
at matchpoints. Willey's threadbare vulnerable overcall
reaped the whirlwind. Down 2 doubled after Dyer led
the club king and shifted to his
singleton spade. 500 (Double-dummy, Dyer-Cable could
get 800: CK, SJ, SAK with Dyer pitching H and C,
H ruff, CA, H ruff. That's 7 tricks, and Dyer
still has Q10x of trump behind the AK.) was worth
9 imps to Cable, who took the lead, 16-8.
Board 8 (Neither vul, West deals):
North
S-AJ7654
West H-76 East
S-KQ2 D-K765 S-
H-984 C-A H-AJ3
D- D-AQJ10832
C-Q987652 South C-KJ4
S-10983
H-KQ1052
D-94
C-103
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P 1S Double
3S 5C P 5D
P 6C P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- 3C 3S 5C
P P Double P
P P
Dyer's double of 5C was a stretch. Cable's pass
in reply isn't to my taste, with four
undisclosed spades, a source of tricks on the
side that might well fit Dyer's hand, and
possibly zero defensive tricks.
Matthew led his CA and eventually
Lorraine scored a heart for -550. No other defense
does better. 5Sx looks like -300 if both sides
pay attention, but mistakes in play might result
in -100 or -500.
I am continually surprised at how many imps are lost in knockout matches on opening leads. In last year's championship flight final, for example, there were huge swings on leads. Here we see the same phenomenon in Flight B. Had Margolin led a club or a heart, or even underled in spades, he would have beaten 6C and won 12 imps. But Barry tried the SA, and McDevitt ruffed in dummy, ruffed a diamond, knocked out the club ace, won the heart shift, discarded a heart on the DA, ruffed a diamond to get the bad news, pitched dummy's two hearts on his good spades, ruffed his last heart, and then safely ruffed a diamond to hand to draw the last trump for 920. 9 imps to Cable, who now led 25-8. Board 9 (EW vul, North deals):
North
S-10853
West H-Q753 East
S-K92 D-10 S-AQJ6
H-AK10 C-QJ98 H-864
D-A97 D-QJ65
C-10753 South C-A4
S-74
H-J92
D-K8432
C-K62
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P 1D
P 3NT P P
P
Margolin led hearts and McDevitt played
DA, D9 for 630. Dyer led clubs, and because
the D10 falls, Willey
could have pushed the board by taking a diamond finesse,
but he played the same as Steve. 600, an imp to
Cable, 26-8.
Board 10 (Both vul, East deals):
North
S-K1032
West H-8 East
S-6 D-KJ1076 S-AQ9
H-AKJ52 C-1072 H-Q1063
D-Q83 D-A4
C-QJ93 South C-AK84
S-J8754
H-974
D-952
C-65
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1C
P 1H P 4H
P 6H P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 2NT
P 3D P 4H
P 4NT P 5D
P 6H P P
P
Push at 1430. If you and your genius
partner would find a sequence to 7C
for 2140, then be my guest and throw stones.
Board 11 (Neither vul, South deals):
North
S-KJ
West H-Q95 East
S-A542 D-J10974 S-Q1097
H-108743 C-1087 H-AJ2
D- D-AK932
C-KQ65 South C-A
S-863
H-K6
D-Q65
C-J9432
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P P P 1D
P 1H P 1S
P 3S P 4S
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P P P 1D
P 1H P 2NT
P 3S P 4S
P P P
I don't think East-West can
take 12 tricks against best defense, but
Willey did, winning an imp for 480 vs. 450,
to trail 26-9.
Board 12 (NS vul, West deals):
North
S-KJ82
West H-AK108 East
S-Q653 D-2 S-A94
H-J953 C-AKQ4 H-7
D-A86 D-KJ7
C-102 South C-J98753
S-107
H-Q642
D-Q109543
C-6
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P 1C P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P 1C 3C
P 3D 3H P
P P
Margolin's natural club went nowhere. He won Anderson's
trump lead and tried three rounds, getting
the bad news, went to the HQ, and played
the S10 to SQ, SK, and SA. Doug drew Barry's
last trump, led DK and D7 to D10 and DA,
and McDevitt put a spade through for down one.
The defense scored 3 clubs, 2 diamonds, and 2 spades.
Dyer's club opening bid only promised two, so I don't think Cable was going to pass if Popiel hadn't acted. East-West got confused about what defensive bidding methods they were employing. Lucky for them that Matthew didn't double for takeout, which might have resulted in a painful penalty. Instead, he competed in his chunkiest four-card major. Cable pulled in a notch and didn't chase the vulnerable game bonus. Popiel led the diamond seven to the ten and ace. I think on this lie of cards Dyer can score ten tricks against any defense if he takes winning views. 170 probably didn't feel so great at the time, but when added to McDevitt-Anderson's 100, it yielded 7 imps to Cable, who led 33-9. Board 13 (Both vul, North deals):
North
S-Q65
West H-K74 East
S-J832 D-Q32 S-K74
H-62 C-AQ107 H-QJ10985
D-K64 D-A
C-8653 South C-J92
S-A109
H-A3
D-J109875
C-K4
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - 1C 1H
2D P 3D P
3H P 3NT P
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - 1D 1H
2H P 2NT P
3NT P P P
Dyer had to open an amorphous diamond in his
methods, but it made no difference. The first
heart was ducked, the ace took the second,
and a diamond dislodged East's
only entry. Push at 630.
Board 14 (Neither vul, East deals):
North
S-QJ
West H-9864 East
S-65 D-874 S-K32
H-AKQ5 C-KJ98 H-J732
D-AKQ632 D-J95
C-6 South C-532
S-A109874
H-10
D-10
C-AQ1074
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - P
1S 2D 2S P
3C 3H P P
3S 4D P 4H
4S P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - P
1S 2D Double P
3C 3H P P
3S P P P
With double fits, "par" is for East-West to
save in six of a red suit, down 2 doubled -300, over
a cold North-South five spades. In reality, the bidding
petered out much lower than that. Both Wests chose a heavy
overcall rather than a takeout double. Popiel-Willey wisely
didn't bid their cold 4H, so Cable, who had a lot of
playing tricks in reserve, was marooned in a
partial. I can't fathom McDevitt's decision to push
Jones into 4S and then defend, unless he thought his pass
was forcing. If so, it was news to Anderson.
Neither declarer took the spade finesse, so that was
420 vs. 170 and six imps to Margolin. This deal ended
the first quarter, so the teams compared and agreed that Cable
led by 18 imps, 33-15.
Board 15 (NS vul, South deals):
North
S-Q1053
West H-5 East
S-K862 D-AKQJ1072 S-94
H-K7 C-2 H-AQJ642
D-63 D-5
C-AJ965 South C-KQ104
S-AJ7
H-10983
D-984
C-873
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P 1C 1D 1H
P 1S 2D 3H
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P 1C 3C 3NT
P P P
If 3H was invitational, then in my opinion,
Doug Anderson underbid. He made five for
+200. Elsewhere, our theme of huge opening lead
swings continued when Cable placed her
club three on the table for -460.
I think everybody misinterpreted Dyer's 3C
bid. Lorraine lost 6 imps, where a diamond
(or perhaps the SA) would win 9. This reduced
her team's lead to
12, 33-21. Board 16 (EW vul, West deals):
North
S-8653
West H-92 East
S-A42 D-752 S-Q107
H-J52 C-AJ72 H-K106
D-Q863 D-AK94
C-Q85 South C-1094
S-KJ9
H-AQ874
D-J10
C-K63
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P P 1D
1H 1NT P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P P 1D
1H P P P
Three rounds of hearts left McDevitt with no real play
for 1NT, but on the run of the diamonds, Jones erred
by discarding two clubs, and thus could be endplayed
because clubs were now blocked. Understandably, Steve didn't
play for this and went down one. With the cards lying so
favorably, Cable could have made up to two overtricks
in 1H, but after ruffing the third diamond,
she was understandably worried about bad
breaks, and held herself to +80, to lose an imp,
making the lead 11 imps, 33-22.
Board 17 (Neither vul, North deals):
North
S-A932
West H-7 East
S-7 D-32 S-J5
H-Q6532 C-AK9532 H-AKJ8
D-AK987 D-654
C-Q7 South C-J1086
S-KQ10864
H-1094
D-QJ10
C-4
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - 1C P
1S 2NT 3S 4H
4S P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - 1C P
1S 2NT 4S P
P P
I'm surprised neither East took a
300 dive in 5H. You'd win 3 imps in
any event, and you put great pressure
on poor South, whose hand sure looks offensive.
McDevitt led a high diamond and switched to the
C7, I'm not sure why. Eventually, Jones
got his clubs going to score 450 and win an
imp, to trail by 10, 33-23.
Board 18 (NS vul, East deals):
North
S-864
West H-1086 East
S-AKQ D-1062 S-732
H-932 C-10753 H-A7
D-Q54 D-AK83
C-KQ96 South C-AJ82
S-J1095
H-KQJ54
D-J97
C-4
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1NT
P 3NT P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 1NT
P 4NT P P
P
6NT is anti-percentage, requiring 4 tricks in diamonds,
but 6C is excellent, needing only the
absence of horrible splits while negotiating a
heart ruff by East. Push at 490. McDevitt just gave up.
Willey-Popiel were in the ballpark, but they aren't longtime partners
and hadn't discussed how to locate minor suit fits
in this sort of situation. Before throwing tomatos,
ask yourself if you and your favorite parter have
gone over this. It's well worth the trouble - I can
tell you that in the championship flight, such layouts
usually put elaborate bidding machinery on display.
My partner and I would use a lot more than one round
of bidding, though I can't promise we'd get it right!
Board 19 (EW vul, South deals):
North
S-QJ1073
West H-KJ75 East
S-6 D-A54 S-AK9
H-93 C-J H-A1042
D-J73 D-KQ9
C-A1098543 South C-KQ6
S-8542
H-Q86
D-10862
C-72
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P P 1S Double
3S 4C P 5C
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P P 1S Double
3S 4C P 4NT
P P P
Again the slam cruise ship left port
without our East-West pairs, when our
Wests let the adverse vulnerability talk them out
of preempting 3C, but then bid 4C freely
over South's preemptive 3S raise. Anderson's 5C
gave McDevitt no shot at bidding slam. Popiel's natural
4NT was closer to doing the trick, but Willey
reasoned that Jan was under pressure and might
not have such full values. The Margolin
squad won 2 imps for 690 vs. 620, when
Cable didn't find the obscure heart lead that would
have held 4NT to 630 for a push. This reduced
the lead to 8, 33-25.
Board 20 (Both vul, West deals):
North
S-Q94
West H-Q3 East
S-KJ2 D-AK5 S-876
H-A8762 C-QJ1083 H-KJ1054
D-84 D-Q62
C-K54 South C-A9
S-A1053
H-9
D-J10973
C-762
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P 1NT P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P 1D 1H
1S 4H 4S P
P P
Ever since I started watching GNT matches and
writing these reports,
the results of cheating on notrump
ranges have been miserable, no matter
the flight, no matter the players. If Margolin's
notrump were 12-14, or 13-15, South would run
to 3D (however he does that in his system), just
as Kaplan Sheinwold recommend, which would probably
result in -100, or more likely -140 when East-West
balance in 3H. But Margolin's notrump showed 15-17 when
what he held was an unappetizing 14 in quackery.
Jones saw no reason to run, but 1NT was a horror show.
On the run of the hearts, Margolin decided he needed hearts
5-5, the diamond queen dropping, and the opponents
to err by leading from the spade king once they
finished the hearts. He pitched 2 spades and 2 clubs from
dummy, two clubs and a spade from hand. Sure
enough, Anderson switched to spades, but the king
was wrong, the enemy cleared spades, and the DQ didn't drop.
All he got was his 3 top tricks for -400. He could have saved
a trick by keeping a third spade in either hand, but on this
layout, no line
does better than down 3 against best defense.
Dyer correctly evaluated the North cards as 13-14, so he opened his amorphous diamond. I'm not familiar with the Cable-Dyer methods, but I'm guessing Lorraine's free 1S response didn't promise either 5 cards or substantial values, with a negative double denying spades or showing something else. Willey took no half measures, leaping to game. Dyer would have to be on his toes to beat 4H. For example, if Cable led the DJ, Matthew has to win and shift to spades, because I think if Jan Popiel managed to set up his DQ for a pitch, he'd get the spades right on the bidding. Instead of defending, however, Dyer tried a wishful 4S. There was no way to come close to making this. Two rounds of hearts tapped Cable on the go, and all Lorraine managed was her book. I have little sympathy for Dyer, who let Willey push him into overbidding his queenery. Do you think Willey should have doubled 4S? He tells me he considered it, and seemed deflated during the comparison when he discovered his luscious +400 was a push. Board 21 (NS vul, North deals):
North
S-4
West H-A754 East
S-975 D-KQ872 S-82
H-KQJ1083 C-A98 H-962
D- D-A10965
C-Q432 South C-KJ10
S-AKQJ1063
H-
D-J43
C-765
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - 1D P
1S 2H P 3H
4S P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - 1D P
1S 4H Double P
4S P P P
Despite favorable vulnerability, neither
East-West took the 300 save in 5H. Perhaps
if either had, South would soldier on with a
5S bid to preserve the push at 650, but that
sounds easier than it is in these days of
nostrums like "the five level belongs to the opponents".
Board 22 (EW vul, East deals):
North
S-Q109
West H-965 East
S-AK753 D-A8543 S-J842
H-AK7 C-62 H-Q3
D-106 D-Q9
C-KQ9 South C-J10543
S-6
H-J10842
D-KJ72
C-A87
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - P
P 1S P 2S
P 4S P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - P
P 2NT P 3C
P 3S P 4S
P P P
Meanwhile, back at the ineffective opening
lead ranch, Margolin led a heart to dummy's
queen. McDevitt drew two rounds of trumps
and piched a diamond loser from dummy on the hearts,
making 4. Dyer led a club, which isn't fatal double-dummy,
but of course on winning her CA, Cable couldn't
find the dangerous-looking diamond
switch from her KJ with Qx in dummy. This deal is a
counter example to those who never lead
an unsupported ace - it's
not so bad from length. Push at 620.
Board 23 (Both vul, South deals):
North
S-J96
West H-73 East
S-K8432 D-K98643 S-AQ75
H-4 C-96 H-AKJ
D-72 D-QJ5
C-QJ1084 South C-753
S-10
H-Q1098652
D-A10
C-AK2
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
1H P P Double
P 1S P 2S
P 4S P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
1H 2H P 3NT
P P P
Finally, a winning opening lead! Barry Margolin
didn't lead partner's heart suit, which lets
4S make. Instead, he led a diamond, for down 2.
That would be a bigtime guess in any flight.
Popiel's 3NT was cold - even if South were to
underlead in diamonds for a heart through, declarer
can rise and keep North off play thereafter. In
fact, South led and pounded hearts, while declarer
countered with clubs. Declarer won the race, scoring 660.
13 imps to Margolin, who retook the lead 38-33.
Board 24 (Neither vul, West deals):
North
S-8
West H-AKJ1065 East
S-AQ72 D-KJ108 S-K1063
H-73 C-AQ H-Q942
D-7652 D-A4
C-1095 South C-KJ4
S-J954
H-8
D-Q93
C-87632
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P 1H P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P 1H P
P Double 2H 2S
P P 3H Double
P P P
Yet another opening lead problem.
Neither East went for a diamond ruff by
leading ace and another, which would
hold hearts to eight tricks. Instead, they
led their spades, but the tap is ineffective -
play it out to see why. Declarer won't take
the club finesse if West switches at trick two,
and is then ahead in the race for control. Alternatively,
if West continues spades, East eventually
gets tangled in endplays or lost tempos. This
deal is a counter example to those who never
lead an unsupported ace - it's not so
bad from shortness. For Anderson,
the lost trick only meant -140 instead of -110.
For Popiel, it meant -530 instead of
+100, and losing 9 imps instead of
winning 6. The Margolin team's
lead had lasted only for one board, and they now
trailed 42-38. Here's a tip: pick your
opening lead BEFORE doubling partscores
at imps.
Board 25 (EW vul, North deals):
North
S-105
West H-AJ932 East
S-AK7 D-Q1074 S-Q96
H-Q654 C-Q7 H-K107
D-83 D-KJ96
C-AJ43 South C-985
S-J8432
H-8
D-A52
C-K1062
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - P P
P 1C 1H 1NT
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P P
1S P 2H P
P P
Anderson won the spade lead, ran the
club nine to the queen, won the spade
return, finessed the H10, repeated the
club finesse, and even guessed the
diamonds, to end up with 9 tricks and +150.
Dyer's 2H was hopeless, but after the
C9 lead, he somehow made his book for -100, and
won 2 imps, to increase the Cable lead to 44-38.
Board 26 (Both vul, East deals):
North
S-J10
West H-A8653 East
S-K96 D-A98 S-A52
H-Q7 C-AQ10 H-J1094
D-7 D-KQ43
C-KJ98532 South C-74
S-Q8743
H-K2
D-J10652
C-6
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - P
P 3C 3NT P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - P
P 1NT(!) 2H Double
P 3C P 3NT
P P P
When it rains, it pours.
The Margolin team suffered an 11 imp loss
by going down multiple tricks in 3NT at
both tables. Barry's thin 3NT overcall
didn't buy a sufficiently strong dummy. He won the club lead,
and played on diamonds. The defense switched
to hearts, and eventually came to two spades,
two diamonds, and two hearts, for down 2. At
the other table, Willey psyched 1NT. Oddly enough,
2Hx can be beaten if the defense is up to snuff. Suppose
Popiel leads the obvious HJ, and Dyer rises HK,
finesses CQ, cashes CA, and ruffs C10 in dummy, Popiel
discarding a spade. Declarer would have to come off
dummy with something, and as long as it's Willey
who breaks diamonds
rather than Popiel, they get six tricks.
I'm not a psycher myself, but the successful ones
I've known all had nerves of steel.
But having recently lost 530 on a Popiel partscore
double, Willey ran. Popiel couldn't take a joke, Dyer led
a low heart against 3NT, and Willey tried to get
his clubs going. When that failed, he was down 3,
taking the same six tricks as the other table's East-West.
Score: 55-38.
Board 27 (Neither vul, South deals):
North
S-A96
West H-K1086 East
S-1075 D-107 S-QJ432
H-Q52 C-A1032 H-7
D-J842 D-AK953
C-J96 South C-Q8
S-K8
H-AJ943
D-Q6
C-K754
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
1H P 3H P
4H P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
1H P 2NT 3D
P P 4H P
P P
Against Jones, McDevitt tried a sporty but
ineffective lead of the CJ. James didn't
guess trumps, but he made his 4H anyway
by losing no club. Popiel got the diamond
lead he directed from Willey, but Cable
guessed trumps on the bidding, for a push
at 420.
Board 28 (NS vul, West deals):
North
S-
West H-Q732 East
S-J832 D-AJ7543 S-KQ109
H-A C-AQ2 H-J1095
D-K108 D-Q2
C-K9865 South C-J107
S-A7654
H-K864
D-96
C-43
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P 1D P
1S P 2D P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P 1D P
1S 2C 2D P
P P
The half concluded with both Norths
making two overtricks in 2D when the club finesse
worked, the diamonds split, and the heart
ace beat the air. Ten tricks might also be made in hearts
on careful play, if anybody could find the suit.
The teams compared scores and agreed the Cable lead
was now 17 imps, 55-38. Play resumed after a short lunch break.
I used my second set of boards numbered 1-28 for the second
half, but I will report them as 29-56. This will make the
vulnerability and dealer appear wrong, but there's no mistake.
It's just that we skipped over 4 boards in the usual cycle.
Board 29 (Neither vul, North deals):
North
S-A7532
West H-J106 East
S-Q63 D-J102 S-K9
H-AQ5 C-97 H-K92
D-A763 D-K984
C-Q65 South C-A1084
S-J108
H-8743
D-Q5
C-KJ32
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P 1D
P 3NT P P
P
An aggravating deal for the defense. North's
spade lead is won by dummy's SK and a diamond
is lost to North. If North continues spades,
West has nine tricks. If not, whenever South wins
his CK, declarer blocks spades by covering.
There's no stopping a push at 400.
Board 30 (NS vul, East deals):
North
S-87543
West H-765 East
S-AQ105 D-K S-
H-AQ C-AQ83 H-K10943
D-J10 D-AQ765
C-76542 South C-K109
S-KJ92
H-J82
D-98432
C-J
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1H
P 1S P 2D
P 3C P 3NT
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 1H
P 3NT P P
P
On this lie of cards, there's no beating
3NT. Willey won an imp for 660 vs.
Anderson's 630, reducing the lead to 55-39.
Board 31 (EW vul, South deals):
North
S-952
West H-J653 East
S-Q8 D-A3 S-KJ73
H-A82 C-J752 H-Q1094
D-K987 D-QJ2
C-9843 South C-Q6
S-A1064
H-K7
D-10654
C-AK10
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
1D P 1H P
1S P 1NT P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
1D P 1H P
1NT P P Double
P P P
It's hard to beat 1NT without a diamond lead.
Willey led a club, so Cable unblocked her
clubs and lead a spade towards the nine.
Eventually, the defense had to break hearts or
spades and give up a seventh trick. However,
Cable's +180 was only worth one imp because
Margolin made nine tricks at the other table. A lead
of the S3 went to S4, S8, and S9, the clubs were
unblocked, and the defense
got no better thereafter, making the
running score 56-39.
Board 32 (Both vul, West deals):
North
S-AJ93
West H-J965 East
S-106 D-KJ9 S-K752
H-AQ873 C-92 H-10
D-7543 D-AQ106
C-65 South C-10843
S-Q84
H-K42
D-82
C-AKQJ7
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P P 1S
1NT P 2C P
2D P 3NT P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P 1NT P
3NT P P P
Anderson opened light in third seat, but directed
the wrong lead of
the S10, ducked to Jones's queen. James played a
second spade to the S9 and SK, and ducked the H10 to
West's HQ. McDevitt switched to diamonds, dooming
the contract. Jones tried the DJ, losing to the
DQ. Jones had already lost 3 tricks when he won Anderson's club shift,
and was still off two aces, so he really ought to cash out for
down one. Instead, he tried a second heart, and now a second
diamond from McDevitt put him down 3, -300.
There's no legitimate way to make 3NT, but Dyer did after a spade lead. He dislodged the SK, and Popiel switched to the H10. Had Willey won his queen and played a diamond, with or without cashing the HA, he would have beaten 3NT, but he ducked to Matthew's HJ, the ninth trick. 600 was worth 14 imps, upping the Cable lead to 70-39, and making this match an uphill battle for the Margolin team. Board 33 (NS vul, North deals):
North
S-A54
West H-7653 East
S-J82 D-Q76 S-Q10976
H-QJ102 C-J53 H-K94
D-1032 D-A85
C-1062 South C-74
S-K3
H-A8
D-KJ94
C-AKQ98
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - P P
1C P 1NT P
3NT P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P P
1C P 1H 1S
2D P 2NT P
3NT P P P
An unlikely heart lead would hold North to nine
tricks, but of course both Easts led spades for -660.
Board 34 (EW vul, East deals):
North
S-A87
West H-J10863 East
S-Q1095 D-4 S-2
H-AKQ9 C-Q872 H-74
D-J75 D-AK109832
C-53 South C-KJ10
S-KJ643
H-52
D-Q6
C-A964
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1D
1S Double 2S 3D
P 3NT P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 1D
1S Double 2S 4D
P 4H P 5D
P P P
In 5D, Popiel guessed the clubs for 600. After
Margolin led a club against 3NT, to the C10 and CA,
Jones switched to a heart. McDevitt ran the table
for 690 to win 3 imps, making the score 73-39.
Board 35 (Both vul, South deals):
North
S-8653
West H-Q6 East
S-AQJ D-87 S-974
H-A75 C-J10863 H-K843
D-AQJ6 D-1032
C-A97 South C-KQ2
S-K102
H-J1092
D-K954
C-54
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P 2C P 2D
P 2NT P 3C
P 3D P 3S
P 3NT P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P 2C P 2D
P 2NT P 3NT
P P P
A normal push at 660. Because South guards everything,
declarer might make six - win the club lead in dummy,
D10 covered and won (repeat the finesse if the D10 holds),
duck a heart, win the club return
in dummy, take the spade finesse, and cash the CA squeezing South
in 3 suits. Any red discard gives up the
twelfth trick, and if he lets go the S10, two more
spades squeeze him in the reds. There's no defense.
Board 36 (Neither vul, West deals):
North
S-Q832
West H-Q75 East
S-AK954 D-73 S-J7
H-A6 C-9632 H-10982
D-962 D-KQ8
C-874 South C-AQJ10
S-106
H-KJ43
D-AJ1054
C-K5
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P P 1C
P 1S P 1NT
P 2D P 2H
P 2NT P 3NT
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- 1S P 2C
Double 2S P 2NT
P 3C P 3S
P 3NT P P
P
Both Souths led the DJ.
Anderson won the DK and
ran his SJ to North, who put a
diamond through. South ran his diamonds
to beat 3NT, and exited in spades. Doug
ran his spades, and the defenders mispitched,
letting him out for down 1. Popiel, on the
other hand, won the DK, led S7 to SA, and
lost a club finesse. Cable laid down the DA
and cleared diamonds. Jan took some clubs, ran his SJ,
and wound up with nine tricks for 400. These
10 imps made the match score 73-49.
Board 37 (EW vul, North deals):
North
S-AK983
West H-9865 East
S-Q7 D-A94 S-5
H-AQJ1032 C-K H-K4
D-J32 D-Q1065
C-109 South C-Q86543
S-J10642
H-7
D-K87
C-AJ72
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - 1S P
3NT(*) P 4S P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - 1S 2NT
3D 3H 3S P
4C P 4D P
4H P 4NT P
5C P 6S P
P P
Dyer-Cable recovered from their ineffective defense
on board 36 with a thin but excellent slam venture.
Cable's 3D over Popiel's offshape unusual 2NT
indicated a good hand with spades, and then she cue
bid twice more, inducing Dyer to go. Jones's
3NT indicated a constructive 5-card raise,
but didn't budge Margolin into a slam try. Perhaps James should
splinter 4H instead. 980 vs. 480 and 11 imps
raised the Cable lead to 84-49.
Board 38 (Both vul, East deals):
North
S-AQ97
West H-K65 East
S-105 D-43 S-KJ2
H-J82 C-K1094 H-Q10974
D-8752 D-AK10
C-7532 South C-A8
S-8643
H-A3
D-QJ96
C-QJ6
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P 1H
P P 1NT P
P P
+110 in 2S is best for North-South, but
both Norths balanced in notrump.
Popiel lost a tempo by leading his DK. He
could have still held 1NT to 90 by switching
to hearts, but he didn't,
so there was no stopping eight tricks. At the
other table, Anderson led a better H10, which
held, and continued the suit. Perhaps Margolin's
duck wasn't such a good idea. He
could have scored 90 by winning the first
heart with his king and playing a diamond
from hand, but now he was stuck in dummy,
and not knowing about the fortunate
diamond position, he took
a spade finesse. Down 1, 6 more
imps to Cable, up 90-49.
Board 39 (Neither vul, South deals):
North
S-AQ8
West H-Q974 East
S-KJ D-K74 S-76
H-AJ3 C-A95 H-K106
D-108 D-QJ965
C-KQ8762 South C-1043
S-1095432
H-852
D-A32
C-J
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P 1C 1NT P
2H(*) P 2S P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P 1C 1NT P
2H(*) 3C 3S P
4S P P
Once Willey and Dyer overbid at the
three level, Cable was overcome with irrational
exuberance and bid game with next to nothing. Even
the dream position in trumps shouldn't have
been enough for ten tricks. Popiel led the C10
to CJ, CQ, CA. Club ruff, SQ, SA, club ruff,
heart from dummy, ducked to the queen and king
for a diamond shift. Even though East-West are
ahead in the red-suit race, the contract now made because West
possessed both remaining heart winners and no third diamond.
You may think Willey could beat 4S
by rising HA to play the D10, but then Dyer could
switch gears and play three rounds of diamonds, endplaying
Popiel. To beat 4S legitimately, Willey has to
make a clever "second hand middle" play
of the HJ! 420 vs. 140 in 2S meant 7 more imps,
for 97-49.
Board 40 (NS vul, West deals):
North
S-1064
West H-984 East
S-AJ83 D-1096 S-KQ52
H-AJ6 C-AQ85 H-105
D-A D-K543
C-K10962 South C-J43
S-97
H-KQ732
D-QJ872
C-7
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- 1C P 1S
P 4S P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- 1NT P 2C
P 2S P 3S
P 4S P P
P
Jones led his singleton club to Margolin's CQ, and
Barry cashed his CA and gave Jones his ruff,
but now the heart loser went away. It's a
nice idea to underlead the club ace for the
ruff, but that doesn't work legitimately here
because declarer can set up a heart to discard
his third club so you
lose your CA. Willey's offshape notrump led
to 4S from the other side and a D10 lead. He
won, drew trumps, and lost
a club. Dyer didn't find the heart shift, so
that was 450, an imp to Margolin, who trailed
97-50.
Board 41 (Both vul, North deals):
North
S-972
West H-K54 East
S-A D-109752 S-KJ8653
H-A987 C-KQ H-J6
D-KQ8 D-64
C-J9632 South C-A108
S-Q104
H-Q1032
D-AJ3
C-754
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - P P
P 1C P 1S
P 1NT P 2S
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P 2S
P P P
McDevitt rebid an offshape 1NT rather than a
noxious 2C. Popiel spared Willey the
aggravation of rebidding by
opening 2S. Push at 140.
Board 42 (Neither vul, East deals):
North
S-K542
West H-J62 East
S-J10 D-5 S-A98
H-A1095 C-KQ1054 H-87
D-A86632 D-KQ109
C-9 South C-AJ87
S-Q763
H-KQ43
D-J7
C-632
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1D
P 2D P 2S
P 3H P 3NT
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 1D
P 5D P P
P
The third quarter ended with pushing
nonvulnerable games, both cold for
400. The teams compared and Margolin
learned they were down 97-50 with one
14-board set to play. Both teams knew
the Margolin team would need
big boards to get back in the match.
Board 43 (NS vul, South deals):
North
S-109873
West H-A6 East
S-6 D-A4 S-QJ52
H-732 C-A1084 H-KQ1098
D-K9876 D-Q32
C-KQ96 South C-3
S-AK4
H-J54
D-J105
C-J752
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P P 1S P
1NT P 2C P
3S P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P P 1S 2H
3H 5H Double P
P P
Both Souths drove that South hand hard, but
nothing bad happened to them. Anderson led a
normal HK. Margolin won to lead a heart up, won
the club switch, and went to dummy's SA to pitch a
diamond on the HJ. Eventually he didn't pick up
spades but he did pick up clubs for 140. Cable's
cue bid talked Willey
into saving against a game that probably wasn't
going to be bid or made. Popiel played well to lose just
the four aces for -300, but that was 4 imps to Cable, now
leading 101-50.
Board 44 (EW vul, West deals):
North
S-98532
West H-96 East
S-KQJ6 D-J743 S-A7
H-A854 C-93 H-KJ7
D-106 D-AK
C-A107 South C-KJ8652
S-104
H-Q1032
D-Q9852
C-Q4
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- 1C P 4NT
P 5H P 6C
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- 1C P 2C
P 2H P 4C
P 4S P 5D
P 5S P 7C
P P
Willey-Popiel gambled on an
approximately 57% grand,
with imp odds of 16-13 against them.
Not a bad shot, which paid off
when Willey played
normally for the drop in clubs, making
the score 101-63. The scoring table breaks
at 1500, so imp odds for vulnerable
grand slams are 16-13 against in the minors,
but a slightly less appetizing 17-13 in other strains,
which in such marginal cases as this,
improves the long term expectancy. Also,
because anything from 750 to 890 is
worth 13, Anderson-McDevitt could have saved
an imp by bidding 6NT, but Willey-Popiel
could have gained no imp for bidding 7NT.
Board 45 (Neither vul, North deals):
North
S-J7
West H-83 East
S-KQ9853 D-AK10 S-A642
H-A C-AJ9875 H-K7
D-J8653 D-Q972
C-2 South C-Q104
S-10
H-QJ1096542
D-4
C-K63
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - 1C P
1H 1S 2C 2H
3H 4S P P
5C P P Double
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - 1C P
1H 2NT 3C 3D
4H 4S P P
5C 5D Double P
P P
Lots of shape, lots of bidding. Cable led her
singleton spade. Popiel had a useful pitch on
his HK, but he couldn't get to it, and so lost
the obvious 3 tricks in 5Dx, down 1.
Had Jones played in hearts, he too
could lose only three tricks. Against clubs,
however, the defense could have scored four.
They didn't because they crashed their heart
honors for down 1. In a parallel universe where Jones
elects to defend, Margolin would find the
diamond ruff that beats 4S, because he was
playing upside-down attitude signals, so
Jones's singleton D4 would be fortuitously
encouraging. Perhaps Dyer would have found
this defense also, but it's hard not to
put a heart through dummy's Kx. I don't
fault either South for saving, but I'd
insist on hearts being trump, myself.
5 more imps to Cable, 106-63.
Board 46 (NS vul, East deals):
North
S-6543
West H-875 East
S-K972 D-A3 S-A108
H-106432 C-KQ63 H-K
D-K7 D-QJ962
C-97 South C-8542
S-QJ
H-AQJ9
D-10854
C-AJ10
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - P
1C P 1S P
1NT P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - P
1C 2H P 3D
P P P
Jones should have taken 8 tricks in his 1NT,
but managed only 7 for +90. At the other table,
far behind in the match, Willey went shooting.
Popiel's 3D contract
looked horrid, but the fall of the spades
let him get out for down 2, -100 and a push.
Board 47 (EW vul, South deals):
North
S-KJ5
West H- East
S-Q873 D-Q863 S-A1096
H-96 C-KQJ432 H-Q1053
D-A105 D-972
C-10985 South C-A7
S-42
H-AKJ8742
D-KJ4
C-6
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
1H P 2C P
2H P 3NT P
4H P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
1H P 2C P
2H P 2NT P
3H P 3NT P
P P
Neither game stands much chance of making
on this misfit.
Against 4H, the defense
took their three side aces and waited for East's
two trump tricks, down 2. Against Dyer's 3NT,
East led a spade to the SQ and SK. Dyer knocked out the club ace,
and Popiel put Willey in with the DA for a spade
through to defeat the contract. However, Dyer now
had eight tricks and escaped for down one
to garner 2 more imps, 108-63.
Board 48 (Both vul, West deals):
North
S-J43
West H-Q632 East
S-AQ976 D-J642 S-8
H-875 C-72 H-AK104
D-985 D-AQ10
C-Q3 South C-J10865
S-K1052
H-J9
D-K73
C-AK94
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P P 1C
P 1S P 2C
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P P 1C
P 1S P 1NT
P P P
Popiel and Anderson chose opposing standard
answers to East's common but ugly rebid problem.
It didn't turn out to matter. Both Souths
elected to lead the HJ and continue hearts after
getting in with clubs, and
the board was pushed, 120 vs. 110.
Board 49 (NS vul, North deals):
North
S-Q542
West H-J108762 East
S-1096 D-J95 S-
H-A C- H-K543
D-KQ10872 D-A654
C-954 South C-AQ1063
S-AKJ873
H-Q9
D-
C-KJ873
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - P 1C
1S P 3S P
P 4D P 5D
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P 1C
1S 2D 3S 4D
4S 5D P P
5S Double P P
P
This bidding was a train wreck for the Margolin team,
and the play wasn't much better. When Jones didn't bid
North-South's vulnerable game over Margolin's preemptive raise, he
let McDevitt balance and East-West bid a
game of their own. On the spade
lead McDevitt could have made six: S ruff, DA, HA, S
ruff, HK pitching C, H ruff, S ruff, H ruff, draw trumps,
lose a club. A trump lead is no better. Steve erred by
discarding a spade on dummy's HK and so was held to contract
because he couldn't escape two club losers.
Perhaps in slam he'd get it right.
At the other table, Popiel had more offense and less defense than his 4D bid suggested. Maybe if he'd jumped to 5D or cue bid 4S, Willey would go slamming and have a chance to make the conclusion of the match very interesting. A club lead surely beats 5Sx, but Willey cashed his singleton HA as Cable dropped her queen. A club shift is still good enough: Lorraine must ruff in dummy or she's down off the top. When East shows out on the first trump, declarer can't draw trumps, so must play hearts. But West can ruff, and another club puts declarer back in the same pickle: if she ruffs in dummy, dummy won't have enough trumps, so she'd have to pitch and go down 1. However Willey played a diamond at trick 2. Curtains - with no dummy tap, Cable could draw trumps and set up hearts. 850 and 400 add up to 15 imps, making the match score 123-63 with only 7 boards to play. Board 50 (EW vul, East deals):
North
S-654
West H-KQ7 East
S-Q87 D-K75 S-AK1092
H-A C-J653 H-J1085
D-J10962 D-Q4
C-KQ109 South C-42
S-J3
H-96432
D-A83
C-A87
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - P
P 1D P 1S
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - P
P 1D P 1S
P 2S P 3H
P 3S P P
P
North-South can't beat 4S if declarer plugs
away at diamonds. Nobody bid that high, and
in practice, Anderson made only nine tricks to
lose an imp, 123-64. I think this Willey-Popiel
auction was affected by the disaster on board 49. If
they'd thought they still had a chance, one of them might
have chased the vulnerable game bonus and won some points.
Board 51 (Both vul, South deals):
North
S-J7
West H-942 East
S-9853 D-QJ5 S-AKQ102
H-86 C-KQ1064 H-KQJ5
D-AK1074 D-832
C-AJ South C-7
S-64
H-A1073
D-96
C-98532
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P 1D P 1S
P 2S P 3C
P 4S P 4NT
P 5H P 6S
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P 1D P 1S
P 2S P 3H
P 4S P P
P
There was no miracle in diamonds, and two
club plays killed any squeeze chances, so
Anderson's "death holding" of three small
diamonds sent 13 imps to Margolin, 123-77.
I think Popiel took a good inference from
Willey's decision not to cue bid on the
way to 4S. Board 52 (Neither vul, West deals):
North
S-Q5
West H-8 East
S-K83 D-Q1096 S-10972
H-AKQJ1032 C-K109876 H-75
D-53 D-KJ72
C-4 South C-AJ5
S-AJ64
H-964
D-A84
C-Q32
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- 1H 3C P
4C 4H P P
P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- 4C P P
P
McDevitt bought a good dummy. Eventually he
guessed the diamonds and led towards his SK for 420.
Willey thought he was playing Namyats, but unfortunately Popiel
thought he wasn't. Oops. That dummy wasn't nearly as good at their table -
down 7, -350, 13 imps to Cable, 136-77.
Board 53 (EW vul, North deals):
North
S-K75
West H-J10876 East
S-J63 D-Q92 S-Q9842
H-A4 C-K2 H-K93
D-AJ7643 D-K10
C-J3 South C-A74
S-A10
H-Q52
D-85
C-Q109865
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - P 1S
P 2D P 2NT
P 3S P 4S
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - P P
P 2D P P
P
After Dyer led a normal HJ, Willey made
his 2D for +90, losing a club, two spades,
a trump and a ruff. A club lead and good defense
surely beats 4S, with North ruffing over dummy. I
think a heart lead also beats it by threatening the
entry to dummy's diamonds. However, continuing
the run of subobtimal opening lead choices in this
match, Jones led a diamond. Anderson won in hand
to lead a spade. Jones rose SA to play another
diamond, and Anderson drove trumps for 650, to
win 11 imps, 147-77.
Board 54 (Both vul, East deals):
North
S-K76543
West H-AQJ64 East
S-10 D- S-AQJ92
H-109852 C-108 H-
D-32 D-AJ987
C-J9754 South C-KQ3
S-8
H-K73
D-KQ10654
C-A62
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- - - 1S
2D P 2H 2S
3H P 4H P
P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- - - 1S
2D P 2H 2S
3H P 3NT P
P P
What propelled the vulnerable
North-Souths into game
on this misfit? Both were lucky not to
get whacked by East-West. Popiel led a good CK against
Dyer's 3NT, and Matthew did well to find seven
tricks and win 3 imps when Margolin
scored only seven in 4H. 150-77.
Board 55 (Neither vul, South deals):
North
S-J65
West H-J54 East
S-A10 D-A1085 S-Q84
H-Q10982 C-A102 H-A7
D-632 D-KQ9
C-QJ5 South C-K9874
S-K9732
H-K53
D-J74
C-63
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
P P P 1C
P 1H P 1NT
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
P P 1NT 2S
P 2NT P 3C
P
Jones led a spade and Anderson made 120. Popiel's
2S was a transfer overcall over the mini-notrump.
2NT inquired, and 3C showed a minimum.
Cable led a heart and Popiel made 130 for a push.
Board 56 (NS vul, West deals):
North
S-Q104
West H-87642 East
S-A8532 D-A4 S-K97
H-95 C-J96 H-AQ103
D-J102 D-K876
C-A43 South C-Q2
S-J6
H-KJ
D-Q953
C-K10875
South West North East
Jones McDevitt Margolin Anderson
- P P 1D
P 1S P 1NT
P P P
Cable Willey Dyer Popiel
- P P 1D
P 1S P 1NT
P P 2H P
P 2S P P
P
Matthew Dyer offered his opponents 500 with his
risky vulnerable 2H, in
order to push his opponents from 1NT to 2S.
He lost an imp for his troubles.
Willey lost 2 diamonds, a heart, a spade, and
a club for 110. Against 1NT, Jones led a club. Anderson
won his CQ, cleared spades, won the club ace,
ran spades, and scored the HA for 90. The match was over.
Lorraine Cable, Matthew Dyer,
Steve McDevitt, and Doug Anderson defeated the
Margolin team by 150 to 78. There can be no question
the Cable team decisively outbid and outplayed
the Margolin squad. Good luck to them in Las Vegas.
I hope readers enjoyed this slice of life in Flight B.
Boston Nationals News
Buzz from the Knockout Regional in Cromwell CT District 25 held its biggest and longest regional, the Knockouts, in Cromwell CT over the six days February 13-18, 2008. I see from the results that we had a big turnout, but that didn't include me, as I was on vacation in South Carolina. My wife and I did play a day of pairs at the Hilton Head Regional, which also had a big turnout. I'm hearing that ACBL attendance is up this year all over. One of the finalists in Cromwell's premier Flight A Knockout, which started Friday the 15th and ended Sunday the 17th, reports that both teams missed a very desirable grand slam on this pair of hands: West East S- S-A109xx H-KQJxx H-A10x D-Kxx D-AQJx C-AKxxx C-x One table Other table 1H 1S 1H 1S 2C 2D 2C 2D 3D 3H 3C 4H 4C 4NT 5C 6H 5S 5NT 6C 6HYou might want to go over how you and your favorite partner would bid this pair of hands in your own favorite methods. The webmaster solicits New England bridge-related written matter of suitable quality for posting. District 25 web site material is volunteer only, but you'll see your name in lights. Short is best. Attaboys and Attagirls Congratulations to New England players who achieved milestones , moving up in rank during February 2008. Previous congrats:
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