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District 25 Grand National Teams Update
On Sunday, April 22, 2007, I kibitzed the Grand National Teams
district finals for the Championship
Flight, between the DeMartino team of (left to right in the picture) The 64-board match was played at the Hartford Bridge Club, and took nine hours with a short halftime break. New Englanders get few chances to play long matches. Readers who haven't played 64 should understand that in this format, you don't lose because of one or two bad results. You get lots of chances, and unless somebody gets a big lead, state of the match considerations are far less important than in shorter imp contests. As long as the Grand National Teams retains this distinct length, the Championship Flight final will remain our biggest knockout match of the year. It also pays a substantial subsidy to the nationals. The DeMartino team subbed in and out as pairs (Becker-DeMartino, Earl-Rothenberg, Brod-McDevitt). Doub-Merblum anchored for Doub, with Stiefel-King-Gabay wheeling sitouts at the other table. DeMartino began with a 5-0 lead, a carryover from January's round-robin. For the first quarter, I kibitzed Becker-DeMartino vs. Stiefel-Gabay. Doub-Merblum faced Earl-Rothenberg at the other table. Board 1 (none vul, N deals):
North
S-K95
West H-10862 East
S-A103 D-87 S-Q64
H-K43 C-K982 H-Q5
D-10642 D-K9
C-AQ4 South C-J107653
S-J872
H-AJ97
D-AQJ53
C-
North East South West
Merblum Earl Doub Rothenberg
P P 2D* P
2H* P P P
Becker Stiefel DeMartino Gabay
P P 1D P
1H P 3H P
P P
Doub's 2D was mini-Roman, any minimum
three-suiter. Steve Earl, who leads more trumps
than anybody, led an ineffective H5 for
-140, but no lead could set 2H with
everything onside.
Voids are the most volatile holdings in bridge: DeMartino's club void induced his jump raise. Had Becker ruffed Stiefel's Rusinow C10 opening lead in dummy, a spade to the king and a red finesse would have led to a push, but, reasonably, Steve pitched a spade from dummy at trick one. Gabay won and produced the S3. Had Becker put up his king, he would still push the board, no matter which red finesse he took or whether he took a spade pitch from dummy on the club king or not, but, reasonably, he played low, and was in trouble. Stiefel won his queen and returned the suit. The favorable lie of both red suits meant Becker could still get home if he won the third spade and took the heart finesse, but not if he took the diamond finesse, a close decision. However, unreasonably in my opinion, Becker unblocked his spade king under the ace. Now Gabay endplayed dummy with a third spade for down 1, and Merblum-Doub had outbid and outplayed Becker-DeMartino five imps worth, to tie the match 5-5. Board 2 (NS vul, E deals):
North
S-KJ5
West H-Q42 East
S-9 D-K874 S-Q7432
H-AKJ963 C-QJ6 H-5
D-2 D-AQ65
C-107432 South C-AK9
S-A1086
H-1087
D-J1093
C-85
East South West North
Earl Doub Rothenberg Merblum
1S P 1NT P
2D P 2H P
P P
Stiefel DeMartino Gabay Becker
1S P 1NT P
2D P 3H P
3NT P 4H P
P P
Gabay outbid Rothenberg with the West cards, and when both Norths
led club queens, she outplayed him, eleven tricks
to ten, winning 7 imps to put the Doub team in
the lead 12-5.
Board 3 (EW vul, S deals):
North
S-1098
West H-KQ East
S-KQ5 D-Q975 S-J7643
H-A107632 C-KJ92 H-9
D-32 D-KJ1084
C-65 South C-103
S-A2
H-J854
D-A6
C-AQ874
South West North East
Doub Rothenberg Merblum Earl
1C 1H 2H P
2NT P 3NT P
P P
DeMartino Gabay Becker Stiefel
1NT 2D* Double P
P 2H 3NT P
P P
Gabay's vul-against-not 2D was "suction": hearts or black suits.
She'd be two down if doubled, but perhaps Becker-DeMartino did better
not to, as Stiefel could find safety in 2S via a redouble, and
simultaneously suggest a lead.
As it was, Gabay led a fourth best H6, for -400. At the other
table, with similar information, Rothenberg led a killing
spade king to win ten imps and put DeMartino back in the
lead 15-12.
Board 4 (Both vul, W deals):
North
S-AKJ107
West H-Q743 East
S-654 D- S-93
H-1062 C-A984 H-K98
D-J93 D-A10742
C-J1052 South C-Q73
S-Q82
H-AJ5
D-KQ865
C-K6
West North East South
Rothenberg Merblum Earl Doub
P 1S P 2D
P 2H P 2S
P 3C P 3H
P 4S P P
P
Gabay Becker Stiefel DeMartino
P 1S P 2D
P 2H P 3S
P 4C P 4S
P P P
Another void problem: North's lack of
diamonds suggested a bad mesh.
A dicey 6S would
make today on either of the reasonable
lines of play, but both North-South pairs
sniffed the air with cue bids and then chickened out.
Stiefel led C3, Earl (staying in character) S3.
DeMartino lost an imp playing safely to make
five where Merblum made six, so DeMartino now led 15-13.
Board 5 (NS vul, N deals)
North
S-Q32
West H- East
S-109874 D-KJ942 S-KJ5
H-K104 C-AK432 H-9763
D-Q753 D-108
C-7 South C-9865
S-A6
H-AQJ852
D-A6
C-QJ10
North East South West
Merblum Earl Doub Rothenberg
1D P 2H P
3C P 3H P
3NT P 4NT P
P P
Becker Stiefel DeMartino Gabay
1D P 1H P
2C P 2S P
3C P 3H P
3NT P 4C P
5C P 5S P
6C P P P
Another void that doesn't help. DeMartino's slow fourth-suit auction
let Becker show a minimum 5-5 or better in the minors with
short hearts and a spade piece. Becker firmly rejected
Rich's 5S grand slam try. Stiefel led the C8, and Becker
played C10, DA, DK, D ruff (Stiefel
pitched a heart), HA discarding spade, H ruff, D ruff (Stiefel threw
his last heart), heart ruffed and overruffed (Stiefel does no better to
pitch a spade). Since dummy's
hearts were good, Stiefel's only chance was a spade. He tried the
jack, but Becker
ran this to his queen for 1370. Very well
done by Becker-DeMartino.
Doub's bulky jump shift robbed Merblum of room to tell his whole story, and he never rebid clubs. Doub might have suspected this and tried 4C over 3NT. Instead, his quantitative 4NT buried clubs at sea. Merblum evaluated his cards correctly for notrump - he made six because Earl led a desperate spade king against 4NT, which he'd never do against 6NT. 12 imps to DeMartino, to lead 27-13.
Board 6 (EW vul, E deals):
North
S-K972
West H-K874 East
S-AQ86 D-96 S-J10
H-1096532 C-QJ6 H-Q
D-J8 D-AQ10542
C-3 South C-A854
S-543
H-AJ
D-K74
C-K10972
East South West North
Earl Doub Rothenberg Merblum
1D P 1H P
2D P P P
Stiefel DeMartino Gabay Becker
1D 2C Double 3C
P P 3H P
P P
Doub sat mute as South, and Earl-Rothenberg scored an easy 110
on a club lead. I think a trump lead and perfect subsequent
defense can hold declarer to
eight tricks. 2C over 1D is the most disruptive of
simple overcalls, and DeMartino's lower requirements for the bid
at favorable vulnerability paid a dividend here. Stiefel probably
suspected 3D would succeed opposite known club shortness,
but an immediate 3D bid might sound too strong and get him too high. He
passed, hoping partner could bid diamonds, but she had only two.
Perhaps Gabay should have stayed fixed and passed: sturdy defense
would beat 3C a trick and hold the loss to two imps. But
wasn't Stiefel's most likely hand a weak notrump with no
suit of four cards except diamonds? She talked herself into
competing, bought a bad dummy and bad splits, and wound up -200
to lose 7 imps. DeMartino now led 34-13.
Board 7 (Both vul, S deals):
North
S-AJ32
West H-653 East
S-Q10985 D-Q82 S-6
H-KQ10 C-852 H-J8742
D-AK D-J9643
C-Q106 South C-A4
S-K74
H-A9
D-1075
C-KJ973
South West North East
Doub Rothenberg Merblum Earl
DeMartino Gabay Becker Stiefel
P 1S P 1NT
P 2C P 2H
P 3H P P
P
The identical auctions indicate a consensus
that this reasonable vulnerable game can't
be bid. I'm not convinced. Are you?
Anyway, a not-so-routine push at 170.
Board 8 (None vul, W deals):
North
S-2
West H-J6542 East
S-K9743 D-QJ74 S-J1086
H-7 C-QJ2 H-AQ3
D-852 D-K96
C-10653 South C-K94
S-AQ5
H-K1098
D-A103
C-A87
West North East South
Rothenberg Merblum Earl Doub
P P 1C Double
1S 2H 2S 4H
P P P
Gabay Becker Stiefel DeMartino
P P 1C 1NT
P 2D P 3H
P 4H P P
P
Both Souths expected finesses through
East's opening bid to succeed, and so it proved.
For the record, Earl led the SJ,
while Gabay led the club five from the other side.
Push for 420 (I think an overtrick is available
double-dummy, but nobody managed it).
Board 9 (EW vul, N deals)
North
S-K63
West H-KJ63 East
S-AQJ D-J876 S-10754
H-Q842 C-K2 H-A1097
D-43 D-AK10
C-J874 South C-A5
S-982
H-5
D-Q952
C-Q10963
North East South West
Merblum Earl Doub Rothenberg
Becker Stiefel DeMartino Gabay
P 1NT P 2C
P 2H P 4H
P P P
After identical Stayman auctions, the Souths
led identical club nines (zero or two higher).
Everybody covered: jack, king, ace.
The spade finesse lost, and the Norths led club dueces
to South's ten. Earl won Doub's diamond
return, went to dummy,
ran the HQ , which Merblum didn't
cover, continued hearts as Merblum split,
unblocked his spades, and ruffed back and
forth with high trump spots to make his
game. Stiefel won Rich's
spade return and led a heart
to the ten, which held, and a heart to the queen
and king.
Having no club, North tried
a diamond. Stiefel needed Steve Becker to hold at least
three spades in order
to ruff his diamond, finesse in trumps, and unblock his ten tricks,
and when all that came off, scored 620, for a push.
Go back to trick three, when Doug and Rich won the second
round of clubs. It's counter-intuitive to force
declarer with the club queen because such a play
would establish dummy's club eight. Nevertheless,
this tapping play defeats 4H if Becker or Merblum discards a
spade and defends best thereafter. You may need to
play it out several times in your head to realize
how devastating North's spade discard is. At
least, I had to. On this layout, declarer can always make 4H
if he doesn't cover the C9 with the CJ. Ducking the CA also
works.
Board 10 (Both vul, E deals):
North
S-104
West H-KQ832 East
S-52 D-KQ3 S-A963
H-J64 C-Q93 H-1075
D-9754 D-1062
C-AK104 South C-865
S-KQJ87
H-A9
D-AJ8
C-J72
East South West North
Earl Doub Rothenberg Merblum
P 1S P 2H
P 2S P 2NT
P 3NT P P
P
Stiefel DeMartino Gabay Becker
P 1NT P 2D
P 2H P 3NT
P P P
Do you open South's cards 1S or 1NT? Here the
choice determines which side 3NT gets played from. Gabay
led C4, and Stiefel returned clubs on winning
the spade ace, but clubs were 4-3 and DeMartino
claimed 600. Earl led C8 from the other side,
but the defense didn't set up and cash the long club,
so Merblum gained an imp for an overtrick to trail 34-14.
Board 11 (None vul, S deals):
North
S-J10
West H-J East
S-A4 D-KQ2 S-KQ976
H-10987653 C-AKJ10742 H-AQ2
D-A D-9763
C-J65 South C-3
S-8532
H-K4
D-J10854
C-Q9
South West North East
Doub Rothenberg Merblum Earl
P P 1C 1S
P 2H 3C 3H
P 4H P P
P
DeMartino Gabay Becker Stiefel
P P 1C 1S
P 2H 3C 3H
4C 4H P P
P
Nobody saved in 5C with neither vul. Quite right, since
the defense has four top tricks and it's not difficult
to find a diamond ruff. In fact, if East led the king
of spades, West could overtake, cash DA, and use East's
two entries to get two ruffs and set 5C doubled 800. A push at 450,
the declarers losing a club and the king of hearts.
Board 12 (NS vul, W deals):
North
S-KJ9763
West H-J763 East
S-Q542 D-AQ6 S-108
H-10983 C- H-KQ4
D-8 D-107
C-AK85 South C-QJ10732
S-A
H-A2
D-KJ95432
C-964
West North East South
Rothenberg Merblum Earl Doub
P 1S 3C 3D
5C 5D P 5H
P 6C P 7D
P P P
Gabay Becker Stiefel DeMartino
P 1S P 2D
P 2S P 3C
P 3D P 3H
P 4D P 6D
P P P
Here's a void that's working hard - despite having
only 23 of the 40 high card points, North-South
are cold for 6D, with a fair chance at 7.
With the spades blocked and not breaking,
there's nothing to the play after
trick one - only a diamond opening lead stops 13
tricks. Both Wests led high clubs, both declarers
quickly ruffed three clubs and pitched a heart on
the spade king to make seven. The Doub
team won 13 imps for enterprise, to trail 34-27.
This is as good a place as any to explain why I don't believe in charge sheets, imps won or lost by a pair per board played, or any other numerical system of assessing the quality of individual or pair play in long knockout matches scored by imps. How many imps did Rothenberg's opening lead lose? The score sheet says 13, but that doesn't take into account the opportunity cost: he would have won 16 if he'd led trumps, for a total of 29. Indeed, Allan was "lucky" diamonds aren't a major, or it would have been 30. But how can any such number, dependent as it is on the other table's result, measure a play? If the other room made +2140 or -100, the swing would be 20. Numerical methods based on imps don't measure just the play itself, they measure something dependent on events in the other room. Call me an impressionist, but I prefer to just say that Rothenberg chose a costly and ineffective opening lead, rather than assign some pseudo-scientific quantity to just how bad the lead was.
If Allan was thinking a club might cash, the lead was
sort of an insult to Doub-Merblum, given their auction.
I don't believe that - Allan must have known dummy was
void, and was trying to tap it. For a tap to be both
necessary and effective,
dummy and partner must start with the same number of
trumps, and dummy must have no entry in hearts. A typical
construction might be
AKxxxxx
xxx
Qxxx KJx J
109xx - QJ
x xxx
AKxx x QJ10xxxx
AKxx
AQ10xxx
xx
Here a trump lead doesn't work - declarer can play DA,
SA, S ruff, DJ, S ruff, DK, run spades to pitch two
hearts and two clubs. At first glance, a club lead
prevents spade establishment, leaving declarer with
a third round heart loser. But think again - you
get squeezed: C ruff, DK, HA, C ruff, HK, run trumps.
I'm not going to defend Allan's lead any more, because
I'm not a fan. I think I see what he was thinking, but
he was aiming at a vanishingly small target.
Board 13 (Both vul, N deals)
North
S-J5
West H-AQ96 East
S-K103 D-A1084 S-Q84
H-10842 C-QJ7 H-J53
D-Q9732 D-J5
C-10 South C-K8532
S-A9762
H-K7
D-K6
C-A964
North East South West
Merblum Earl Doub Rothenberg
1NT P 2H P
2S P 3C P
3NT P P P
Becker Stiefel DeMartino Gabay
1H P 1S P
1NT P 2C P
3NT P P P
Doub-Merblum play 12-14 notrumps.
Becker-DeMartino, who occasionally open a
four card major, play that a checkback
2C is at least a game invitation. None of that mattered
here, as a 3NT contract was inevitable. With spades 3-3 and
the clubs there to be had, both declarers
made five in short order.
Board 14 (None vul, E deals):
North
S-AK109
West H-76 East
S-Q D-QJ42 S-J2
H-KJ83 C-862 H-952
D-K8653 D-109
C-J94 South C-KQ10753
S-876543
H-AQ104
D-A7
C-A
East South West North
Earl Doub Rothenberg Merblum
Stiefel DeMartino Gabay Becker
P 1S P 3S
P 4S P P
P
Neither of the team captains made any slam try
with the South cards over a limit raise. Both were
correct at double-dummy: the spades split, but both
red finesses lose. Both made six in practice, since
both Wests led the eight of hearts. Replace South's 4S
bid with 5S, asking for good trumps. When North
raises to 6S, would you lead red or black as West?
Board 15 (NS vul, S deals):
North
S-Q6
West H-J87 East
S-1093 D-A108532 S-AKJ52
H-KQ10643 C-Q3 H-A
D-QJ D-K94
C-A7 South C-10542
S-874
H-952
D-76
C-KJ986
South West North East
Doub Rothenberg Merblum Earl
P 1H P 1S
P 2H P 3NT
P P P
DeMartino Gabay Becker Stiefel
P 1H P 1S
P 2H P 3C
P 3S P 4S
P P P
In 4S, Stiefel got a diamond lead and made five. He
could have made six double dummy. At the
other table, Doub led the C8 against
Earl's inferior 3NT. You and I can see that Doug has
no entry, so ducking makes the hand. Not knowing the
layout, Steve put up dummy's ace, trying to block the
suit. Merblum unblocked his club queen, a good play. Earl
could still make 3NT by playing for both SQ and HJ to
drop, but he cashed HA and played a diamond. Merblum won and
put a deadly club through for down one to win 11 imps.
The Doub team thus retook the lead, 38-34.
Board 16 (EW vul, W deals):
North
S-764
West H- East
S-J102 D-Q1087643 S-KQ853
H-952 C-1097 H-AKJ10873
D-AJ92 D-
C-J53 South C-Q
S-A9
H-Q64
D-K5
C-AK8642
West North East South
Rothenberg Merblum Earl Doub
P P 1H 2C
2H P 4C P
4H P 5D P
6D P 6H P
P P
Gabay Becker Stiefel DeMartino
P P 1H 1NT
2H 3D 4H P
P 5D 5H Double
P P P
The last board of the quarter was an entertaining
push at 200, with voids on parade. Both West's poured
gasoline on the fire by freely raising hearts. Doub's
heavy 2C overcall
did nothing to dampen Earl's ardor. Had Rothenberg
cuebid 4D over 4C, they might have avoided the bad slam.
Note that Doub, South, paid his opponents a compliment
by not doubling. If Doug ever DOES double your freely
bid slam when he's on lead, you're going for your lungs!
Earl lost two aces and a trump for minus 200.
DeMartino's offshape notrump dismissed all slam thoughts
from Stiefel's mind, but it also
helped Becker: when DeMartino didn't
double 4H, Steve took a good save in 5D. His heart void was
doing its job - if you play 5D doubled out several ways in
your head, you find Becker does best to use dummy's many entries to
ruff all dummy's hearts to shorten himself. You wind up in a
maze of trump coups and defenses to them. I think best play all around results
in minus 300, clearly a pickup compared to 620. And bidding 5D
paid an even bigger dividend in practice. For all Stiefel knew, defending
5D might result in a double game swing. He took the push to 5H and
discovered his diamond void was a duplicated value. DeMartino doubled
5H to stop Becker from bidding any more, for a push. Should Stiefel have
bid 3S over 3D, so that he could better trust Gabay
if she doubled a high diamond contract? It would still be
tough to pass 5D around on such a nifty 7-5 hand. Perhaps
Gabay shouldn't have raised to 2H over 1NT.
Doub led by a 4 imp nose at the quarter turn. For DeMartino, Brod-McDevitt came in to play against Doub-Merblum. For Doub, King replaced Gabay, to face Earl-Rothenberg. I kibitzed the latter table. Board 17 (None vul, North deals):
North
S-AKJ65
West H-A East
S-Q109 D-J82 S-43
H-J10 C-A873 H-K8632
D-Q7653 D-K109
C-1064 South C-J92
S-872
H-Q9754
D-A4
C-KQ5
North East South West
King Earl Stiefel Rothenberg
McDevitt Doub Brod Merblum
1S P 1NT P
2C P 3S P
4S P P P
Nobody sniffed at this bad but cold slam. At
the table, you guess this is a push at 480,
and so it proves, but it aggravates the Norths
to worry about losing 10 imps to bad
bidding at the other table.
Board 18 (NS vul, E deals):
North
S-J96
West H-K92 East
S-AQ2 D-Q643 S-87
H-J54 C-975 H-10876
D-82 D-AJ97
C-A10862 South C-J43
S-K10543
H-AQ3
D-K105
C-KQ
East South West North
Earl Stiefel Rothenberg King
P 1S P 1NT
P 2NT P 3S
P P P
Doub Brod Merblum McDevitt
P 1S P 1NT
P 2NT P 3NT
P P P
Brod-McDevitt, just entering the match, got their feet wet
with a horrid vulnerable 3NT. Doub led an attitude H8, so
Merblum played clubs upon winning his spade tricks. I doubt
any sequence of plays could induce Doub to unblock his CJ, potentially
the setting trick, so it made no difference whether Merblum
played CA-Cx, or Cx-CA, or Cx-Cx. 3NT was going down one regardless.
How very lucky for McDevitt - swap the defenders' C10 and CJ,
and he'd be down three. Indeed, had he passed 2NT, Doub might
unblock and beat him two. Perhaps Pat saved an undertrick by overbidding!
Minus 100 didn't look so bad as a result on this layout.
Rothenberg had several chances to get a diamond ruff and beat 3S, so long as Earl reads the D8 as a doubleton rather than a singleton, which he should, on the bidding. But Allan led CA and defended passively thereafter. In due course, after all the trumps were gone, Stiefel finessed the D10 for 140, winning six imps to increase the Doub lead to 44-34. Board 19 (EW vul, S deals):
North
S-J4
West H-108 East
S-KQ2 D-A54 S-109653
H-KQ9762 C-AQJ874 H-
D-108 D-KJ963
C-96 South C-1032
S-A87
H-AJ543
D-Q72
C-K5
South West North East
Stiefel Rothenberg King Earl
Brod Merblum McDevitt Doub
1H P 2C P
2NT P 3NT P
P P
Against every South's 3NT, Rothenberg led SK, Merblum SQ.
Brod out-matchpointed Stiefel 10 tricks to 9, to win an imp
and reduce the Doub lead to 44-35.
Board 20 (Both vul, W deals):
North
S-Q642
West H-KQ864 East
S-95 D-Q5 S-J1073
H-952 C-Q6 H-73
D-A108642 D-J9
C-J4 South C-K10853
S-AK8
H-AJ10
D-K73
C-A972
West North East South
Rothenberg King Earl Stiefel
P P P 1C
P 1H P 2NT
P 3NT P P
P
Merblum McDevitt Doub Brod
P P P 1C
P 1H P 2NT
P 3D* P 3H
P 3NT P P
P
Both Wests led the D6, and King got the imp back,
scoring 11 tricks to McDevitt's 10. Doub led 45-35.
Board 21 (NS vul, N deals)
North
S-108
West H-QJ6 East
S-AKQJ943 D-KJ1042 S-765
H-93 C-J94 H-AK1085
D-Q D-865
C-KQ10 South C-A2
S-2
H-742
D-A973
C-87653
North East South West
King Earl Stiefel Rothenberg
McDevitt Doub Brod Merblum
P 1H P 2S
P 3S P 4NT
P 5H P 6S
P P P
Both Norths led diamonds against a gimme slam, pushed at 980.
Board 22 (EW vul, E deals):
North
S-A9743
West H-984 East
S- D-987 S-K1085
H-K1075 C-Q7 H-J63
D-A64 D-QJ52
C-K96543 South C-A2
S-QJ62
H-AQ2
D-K103
C-J108
East South West North
Earl Stiefel Rothenberg King
1D Double Redouble 2S
P P 3C P
3NT P P P
Doub Brod Merblum McDevitt
P 1C P 1S
P 2S Double 3S
P P P
Doub led the DQ against McDevitt's 3S, and Pat
went down three against a nasty lie of cards,
leaving Doub feeling like he should have doubled.
At the wheel in an airy 3NT, Earl pitched a
heart from dummy on Stiefel's SQ lead,
won the SK, and ducked a club to King's CQ. This was
the only line for nine tricks, but when a low spade went to
the eight and jack and a spade came back,
Steve fell from grace and let go one of dummy's
clubs. Victor smartly ducked the third spade.
Earl won, cashed his CA and took a diamond finesse, but
he only had eight tricks and the defenders had retained
communications to King's fifth spade. Down one and 6 more
imps to Doub, who now led 51-35.
Board 23 (Both vul, S deals):
North
S-73
West H-764 East
S-92 D-Q63 S-Q108
H-K1098 C-AJ754 H-J532
D-K74 D-1092
C-Q1086 South C-K32
S-AKJ654
H-AQ
D-AJ85
C-9
South West North East
Stiefel Rothenberg King Earl
Brod Merblum McDevitt Doub
1S P 1NT P
3D P 3S P
4S P P P
Rothenberg led a trump against the routine 4S and Stiefel lost
only the red kings, making five. Merblum led the C8, and
Brod didn't guess which finesses to take using dummy's
few entries, so he wound up making only 4. An imp to Doub,
now up 52-35.
Board 24 (None vul, W deals):
North
S-AQ853
West H-KJ9 East
S-K107 D-952 S-J96
H-7642 C-72 H-8
D-KJ D-Q1043
C-K1098 South C-AQ653
S-42
H-AQ1053
D-A876
C-J4
West North East South
Rothenberg King Earl Stiefel
Merblum McDevitt Doub Brod
P P P P
Stiefel and Brod, perhaps depriving the world of bedazzlement at their
prowess as declarers in 3H, threw in their respective towels.
Perhaps they feared spades.
Board 25 (EW vul, N deals)
North
S-AK872
West H-1083 East
S-QJ96 D-86 S-54
H-7 C-A86 H-Q652
D-QJ102 D-AK743
C-QJ42 South C-K5
S-103
H-AKJ94
D-95
C-10973
North East South West
King Earl Stiefel Rothenberg
1S Double 2H P
3H P P 3S
P P P
McDevitt Doub Brod Merblum
1S Double 2H 2NT
3H P P P
I didn't see Frank and Doug give Patrick ten tricks
(Merblum led DQ, then CQ. Doub ill-advisedly unblocked his
CK under dummy's ace), because I
was watching Rothenberg go down 3 vulnerable
tricks in a strange 3S contract at the other table.
Even New England's best pairs sometimes bring
back a ragged result or two in these long grinding
matches. Anyway, four more imps to Doub, and a 56-35 lead.
Board 26 (Both vul, E deals):
North
S-10
West H-AJ9543 East
S-KQ642 D-876 S-AJ75
H-Q C-AQ3 H-K10
D-AK10543 D-Q92
C-7 South C-10942
S-983
H-8762
D-J
C-KJ865
East South West North
Earl Stiefel Rothenberg King
P P 1S 2H
3H Double 4D P
4S P P P
Doub Brod Merblum McDevitt
P P 1D 1H
Double 3H 4S P
P P
On different auctions, both North-Souths missed a good save.
Two aces, push at 650.
Board 27 (None vul, S deals):
North
S-10642
West H-KJ6 East
S-K97 D-J85 S-Q85
H-874 C-AK5 H-A3
D-A1062 D-Q743
C-1064 South C-J972
S-AJ3
H-Q10952
D-K9
C-Q83
South West North East
Stiefel Rothenberg King Earl
1H P 1S P
1NT P 4H P
P P
Brod Merblum McDevitt Doub
1H P 2C P
2NT P 3NT P
P P
In 4H, Stiefel slowly set up dummy's long spade,
which is the best he could do,
but that was still down one. Brod's superior 3NT is cold
double-dummy, even on an unlikely club opening lead.
Winning the actual diamond lead, Geof knocked
out the heart ace and had nine tricks, and the 4-4
diamond split meant the defense had only four
tricks in time. Ten much-needed imps to DeMartino,
who now trailed 56-45.
Board 28 (NS vul, W deals):
North
S-K865
West H-862 East
S-AQ107 D-4 S-J9
H-7 C-KQ984 H-J10953
D-K10762 D-Q85
C-732 South C-J65
S-432
H-AKQ4
D-AJ93
C-A10
West North East South
Rothenberg King Earl Stiefel
P P P 1D
1S 1NT P 3NT
P P P
Merblum McDevitt Doub Brod
P P P 1D
P 1S P 2NT
P 3NT P P
P
Merblum led C7, Earl SJ. Brod took his ten
tricks, but King let one get away. An imp to DeMartino,
now down 56-46.
Board 29 (Both vul, N deals)
North
S-A
West H-AJ943 East
S-J1073 D-AQ7 S-962
H-K10 C-J765 H-Q852
D-K852 D-J10943
C-Q103 South C-9
S-KQ854
H-76
D-6
C-AK842
North East South West
King Earl Stiefel Rothenberg
1H P 1S P
2C P 2D P
3NT P 4C P
4D P 6C P
P P
McDevitt Doub Brod Merblum
1H P 1S P
2C P 3D P
4D P 6C P
P P
King's 3NT jump over Stiefel's amorphous fourth-suit 2D
implied extras, but wasn't forcing. Then Victor's cue-bid over
the forcing 4C served as a booster rocket.
Brod thought 3D was a splinter bid, showing
good clubs and short diamonds. I think
McDevitt wasn't sure about 3D, but liked his hand
in any case. Brod may have been worried that he'd
be taken out of clubs to diamonds and was
hot after the club slam anyway, so he clarified.
Well bid by the North-Souths, I think. The CQ didn't drop but
the diamond finesse worked. A push for 1370.
Board 30 (None vul, E deals):
North
S-AQJ7
West H-864 East
S-85 D-KJ1083 S-963
H-A105 C-Q H-Q92
D-A764 D-Q95
C-A962 South C-KJ85
S-K1042
H-KJ73
D-2
C-10743
East South West North
Earl Stiefel Rothenberg King
P P 1D 1S
P 2S P P
P
Doub Brod Merblum McDevitt
P P 1NT 2C*
P 2D* P P
P
King-Stiefel coped with Rothenberg's diamond opening while
Brod-McDevitt went astray over Merblum's weak notrump.
Brod thought McDevitt's 2C showed a single suited hand.
2S made two overtricks, 2D two undertricks, and
7 imps floated to Doub, who now led 63-46.
Board 31 (NS vul, S deals):
North
S-1097653
West H-J East
S-J4 D-Q5 S-Q2
H-KQ1043 C-AK84 H-9872
D-AK86 D-1042
C-QJ South C-7653
S-AK8
H-A65
D-J973
C-1092
South West North East
Stiefel Rothenberg King Earl
P 1H 1S P
2H 3D 3S P
P P
Brod Merblum McDevitt Doub
1D 1H 1S P
2S P 4S P
P P
Brod's opening bid led easily to a reasonable
vulnerable game. The South cards aren't
opened vulnerable in the King-Stiefel style, and
Earl's silence plus Rothenberg's obstruction gave them too
much to think about to recover. King's 3S was
not invitational - they play that 3H is the only
game try here. Stiefel might go to four anyway, as he has a
super passed hand, but it sure sounded
like Allan had a real two-suiter and the black suits
wouldn't behave. You take
inferences from opponents' bidding at your own risk,
however. Everything fell down for 11 tricks and 10 imps
to DeMartino, now down only six, 63-56.
Board 32 (EW vul, W deals):
North
S-A76
West H-109 East
S-KQ2 D-AKQ8753 S-108
H-Q3 C-6 H-K765
D-9 D-642
C-AQJ10984 South C-7532
S-J9543
H-AJ842
D-J10
C-K
West North East South
Rothenberg King Earl Stiefel
1C 3NT P P
P P P
Merblum McDevitt Doub Brod
1C 1D P 1S
2C 3C P 3H
P 4S P P
P
In a bidding contest like Challenge the Champs, North-South
might do best to stop in a partscore. In the real world,
our North-South's did better than that.
Brod-McDevitt did so by using the customary bridge skills. They bid to the best of the iffy games, 4S. Brod won the singleton diamond lead in dummy and came off with the trump 6, to the S8, S9, and SK. Merblum, who didn't know the CK was singleton, switched to a heart immediately. Brod won HA and pushed through the SJ to make six. Note that 4S can always be made - Merblum's most testing opening lead would be the HQ, which declarer must duck to make his game, but Geof would be up to that. To give declarer a losing option in that spade suit, Doub ought to go up with the ten, trying to look like a man with Q10. But Brod heard the auction and wasn't born yesterday. I doubt he'd be fooled on this deal. King beat the Champs by playing poker with his 3NT bid, and the spotlight shone on Earl. Surely Victor is ready for clubs, thought Steve. Perhaps he has nine tricks in the minors, but is off five tricks in the majors. So Earl led the five of hearts, and King claimed nine tricks. Two imps to DeMartino, who trailed 63-58 at the half, but surely King had ticked off his opponents, and aggravated opponents might be worth more than two imps later on. Getting hornswoggled like this plays tricks with your head. Trust me, I've been there. If you've never played at the Hartford Bridge Club, do so the next time you're in West Hartford. They have duplicates every day - see www.hartfordbridgeclub.org. Indeed, a pair game was held in the open room during the first half of this match, but wide table spacing, great acoustics, and polite players meant one hardly noticed. Some of our players went out for a sandwich at halftime, but you really didn't need to, with all the snacks at the club. I stayed and nibbled. The match was so close that I nervously transcribed enough deals so we could reshuffle if there was an overtime and not lose our hand records. I'm going to call the second half boards 33 to 64, although of course I used my second set of boards marked 1 to 32. For the third quarter, I kibitzed King-Gabay against Brod-McDevitt while Becker-DeMartino faced Doub-Merblum in the other room. Board 33 (none vul, N deals):
North
S-Q8632
West H-QJ10 East
S-J9 D-K7 S-A107
H-843 C-Q82 H-AK96
D-QJ93 D-108654
C-AJ53 South C-4
S-K54
H-752
D-A2
C-K10976
North East South West
Becker Doub DeMartino Merblum
P P P P
King Brod Gabay McDevitt
P 1D P 2D
P 2H P 3D
P 5D P P
P
Doub missed out on an easy 130 by not
opening those East cards. Oops, maybe
not so easy - Brod alerted McDevitt's 2D
as inverted. He expected a better dummy,
and thus overbid to 5D down 1.
Of all the partnerships in this match,
Brod-McDevitt had the least match experience
as partners,
and it showed here. Two imps to Doub, who
led 65-58.
Board 34 (NS vul, E deals):
North
S-10832
West H-A964 East
S-7 D-6 S-K96
H-Q10832 C-AK97 H-75
D-Q104 D-AKJ932
C-10543 South C-82
S-AQJ54
H-KJ
D-875
C-QJ6
East South West North
Doub DeMartino Merblum Becker
1D 1S P 4S
P P P
Brod Gabay McDevitt King
1D 1S P 4D
P 4S P P
P
Once East opens, the spade finesse is a big
favorite, so North-South would want to be in
6S. King made a fine splinter bid, but Gabay
austerely nixed. Gee, she had 14 points, all working
hard, in a one-level overcall. Perhaps Victor has
splintered Sheila on worse hands in the past. Note
that this is a bad deal for keycard Blackwood - you
won't bid 6S over a 5H response, for fear you're
off two aces. Push at 680.
Board 35 (EW vul, S deals):
North
S-J10732
West H-8 East
S-98 D-A10753 S-A5
H-KQ C-K7 H-J976432
D-KQ86 D-942
C-QJ1085 South C-4
S-KQ64
H-A105
D-J
C-A9632
South West North East
DeMartino Merblum Becker Doub
1C P 1S P
2S P 4S P
P P
Gabay McDevitt King Brod
1C P 1S P
3S P 4S P
P P
A routine 4S. Becker made 6 to King's 5, an imp
to DeMartino, trailing 65-59.
Board 36 (Both vul, W deals):
North
S-
West H-109865 East
S-K97 D-A1043 S-1086542
H-KQ7 C-KJ74 H-
D-K9 D-QJ8752
C-AQ853 South C-6
S-AQJ3
H-AJ432
D-6
C-1092
West North East South
Merblum Becker Doub DeMartino
1C P 1S 2H
2NT 4H 4S Double
P P P
McDevitt King Brod Gabay
1C P 1S 2H
Double* 2S 4S Double
P 5H P P
Double P P P
The voids came back with a vengeance. No
matter how North-South reach their 4H game,
East will always save in 4S, and South will
double. King mistrusted this and ran to 5H,
but McDevitt cashed his CA and had to score
two trump tricks for +200.
At the other table, Becker nervously sat for the double and pondered DeMartino's lead of the diamond six, covered by dummy's nine. What was going on? Of course, rising and giving Rich a ruff beats the hand one trick, but Steve didn't figure out that the lead was a singleton. He put in the D10 and Doub won the queen to play a trump up, intending to cover South's card. The hand was not over. Rich split with the SJ and dummy won the king, and played another spade. Rich won the queen and switched to a club through the AQ. Doug rose with the ace, a play that should have given his hand away. Doug didn't want to play another trump now, because he could see that Rich would win and tap him with a club. Then if he drew the last trump, he'd only have one left, and Becker would see Rich show out on the second round of diamonds, and know to duck his ace, leaving the lead stranded in dummy, and Doug, with only one trump, wouldn't have transportation to set up his diamonds and then run them. Note that this analysis is faulty - if Doug had gone ahead and driven out the trump ace, ruffed the club return, and drawn the last trump, his diamond spots were good enough that he could afford to jettison the DK, then drive out the DA with a trump to get in with. But, in the heat of battle, Doug didn't see this, and, leaving the third trump in dummy, called for the DK. All Steve had to do was duck his ace. Rich would ruff and draw dummy's last trump, and eventually Steve's DA would set the hand. Instead, Becker won his DA, and now Doub took a tap and drove trumps for only two losers to score +790, 11 imps to Doub, now leading 76-59. Board 37 (NS vul, N deals)
North
S-Q7432
West H-AJ653 East
S-105 D-QJ S-K6
H-1092 C-2 H-74
D-K642 D-A8753
C-KJ103 South C-AQ98
S-AJ98
H-KQ8
D-109
C-7654
North East South West
Becker Doub DeMartino Merblum
P 1D P 1NT
P 2C P 3D
P P P
King Brod Gabay McDevitt
P 1D P 1NT
2D P 2S P
P 3C 3S P
P P
Gabay knew King had the majors, but he'd
passed as dealer, so she made no move towards game. That's
very conservative with all her working cards, but
she won a swing for missing her vulnerable game, because
Becker-DeMartino lost their tongues. Note that the
theoretical par on the board is
for East-West to take a 300 dive in 5D.
As it was, 170 and 110 meant 7 imps to Doub, now
leading 83-59.
Board 38 (EW vul, E deals):
North
S-10863
West H-Q64 East
S-952 D-J10432 S-KQJ7
H-J98 C-Q H-A52
D-KQ96 D-8
C-432 South C-AJ1097
S-A4
H-K1073
D-A75
C-K865
East South West North
Doub DeMartino Merblum Becker
1C P 1D P
1S P 2C P
P P
Brod Gabay McDevitt King
1C P 1D P
1S P 1NT P
P P
The cards lay very well for both partials - you
pick up clubs for one loser even with
no entry to West's hand. So McDevitt
gained an imp for making 9 tricks at notrump
against Doub's 10 tricks at clubs, reducing
the Doub lead to 83-60.
Board 39 (Both vul, S deals):
North
S-A109632
West H-4 East
S-754 D-A95 S-KJ8
H-AQ98 C-J104 H-K1053
D-J10643 D-72
C-6 South C-Q972
S-Q
H-J762
D-KQ8
C-AK853
South West North East
DeMartino Merblum Becker Doub
1C P 1S P
1NT P 3S P
3NT P 4S P
P P
Gabay McDevitt King Brod
1C P 1S P
2C P 2D* P
3H P 3S P
3NT P 5C P
P P
The Souths struggled with an
ugly rebid problem over the 1S response.
The Norths chased a vul game by bidding
more than 2S, then pulled 3NT,
which would have made because hearts were 4-4 and you can pick up the
clubs. 5C was too much to handle on the D10 lead, and
went helplessly down 2. Doub led a heart gainst 4S. Merblum won the HA,
switched to his singleton club, and duly got his ruff
for down 1. 3 imps to DeMartino, to trail 83-63.
Board 40 (None vul, W deals):
North
S-KJ53
West H-K4 East
S-A87 D-K2 S-942
H-Q762 C-Q8765 H-AJ95
D-J9653 D-4
C-K South C-J10943
S-Q106
H-1083
D-AQ1087
C-A2
West North East South
Merblum Becker Doub DeMartino
P 1C P 1D
P 1S P 2H
P 2NT P 3NT
P P P
McDevitt King Brod Gabay
P 1C P 2NT
P 3NT P P
P
Once the Norths opened their aceless trash,
the customary thin 3NT was inevitable. Gabay's
2NT was the old-fashioned forcing variety.
McDevitt led a heart and Gabay knew she was
going down when Brod put his ace on dummy's king.
East won the fourth heart and put a club through,
and not having peeked, Sheila ducked for down 2.
I think Rich DeMartino did a good thing
by protecting the king of hearts in the
auction, but it doesn't show up on the
scoreboard because Doub led C4, Becker of
course ducked in dummy, and a heart came back for the
same down 2. Even if Steve had risen dummy's ace, Merblum would
put a heart through when he won the spade ace.
You ain't making game against this lie
cards. No way, no how.
Board 41 (EW vul, N deals)
North
S-Q973
West H-A East
S-A D-QJ1064 S-J102
H-KQ987532 C-J52 H-J10
D-8 D-A9732
C-AQ3 South C-874
S-K8654
H-64
D-K5
C-K1096
North East South West
Becker Doub DeMartino Merblum
P P 2S 4H
4S P P 5H
P P P
King Brod Gabay McDevitt
P P 1S Double
2NT* 3D P 4H
4S P P 5H
P P P
The five level belongs to the opponents, so they say.
Both Souths chirped spades in third seat, both
Wests bid heart games in ways indicating they
were bidding to make, both Norths smartly sacrificed,
both Easts wisely passed the decision to the Wests,
both Wests took the push, and both North-Souths gave up.
With the club finesse working, 5H pushed at 650. Note that with a
good play in trumps, 5S would be a paying dive at 300. That's
hard to do.
Board 42 (Both vul, E deals):
North
S-A42
West H-642 East
S-Q7 D-J96 S-J93
H-KJ9 C-8542 H-108
D-A7532 D-KQ84
C-K107 South C-AJ63
S-K10865
H-AQ753
D-10
C-Q9
East South West North
Doub DeMartino Merblum Becker
P 1S P 2S
P P P
Brod Gabay McDevitt King
P 1S P 1NT
P 2H P 2S
P P P
An easy club guess makes 4D, 4C, or indeed 4NT
East-West, but you have to bid something to
make something. The Wests capped their ineffective campaigns
of silence with less than stellar leads. Merblum led
H9, so DeMartino went +110. Gabay had a chance to
push, because McDevitt led the SQ! But of course
she won dummy's ace and took a heart finesse for
-100 and 5 imps to DeMartino, now trailing 83-68.
Board 43 (None vul, S deals):
North
S-65
West H-Q1053 East
S-AK1087 D-K102 S-J9
H-86 C-A1097 H-9742
D-65 D-AJ974
C-8652 South C-K3
S-Q432
H-AKJ
D-Q83
C-QJ4
South West North East
DeMartino Merblum Becker Doub
1NT P 2C P
2S P 2NT P
P P
Gabay McDevitt King Brod
1NT P 2C P
2S P 3NT P
P P
Merblum led a fourth best S8 to DeMartino's queen. The club
finesse lost, and the defense cashed out for
down one. McDevitt led an attitude C6. Brod won his king
and shifted smartly to spades for down 3, 3 imps to
DeMartino, now within 12 at 83-71.
Board 44 (NS vul, W deals):
North
S-AQJ654
West H-A10 East
S-K D-10 S-1072
H-KQ6 C-K1095 H-953
D-AJ9874 D-632
C-Q74 South C-J632
S-983
H-J8742
D-KQ5
C-A8
West North East South
Merblum Becker Doub DeMartino
1D 1S P 2D
P 4D P 4S
P P P
McDevitt King Brod Gabay
1D 1S P 2D
Double 4S P P
P
The Easts led diamond deuces, and a fortunate
and unlikely lie of cards let both Becker and King pick
up the spade king, ruff two clubs, and pitch a
heart on dummy's diamond winner for matching 680's.
Board 45 (Both vul, N deals)
North
S-AJ76542
West H-K6 East
S-Q9 D-J62 S-103
H-Q1053 C-A H-J9742
D-Q94 D-K10853
C-KJ85 South C-4
S-K8
H-A8
D-A7
C-Q1097632
North East South West
Becker Doub DeMartino Merblum
1S P 2C P
2S P 4S P
P P
King Brod Gabay McDevitt
1S P 2C P
2S P 3S P
4C P 4D P
4S P 5H P
6S P P P
Merblum led his singleton C4 against 4S,
where it hardly mattered, and Becker made six.
King received a heart lead from McDevitt
against his fair slam. You and I can see
several ways for King to take twelve tricks. It works to win
dummy's HA and play ace and a diamond, then use the
HK and CA to ruff your third diamond and get
back to draw trumps. It also works to play
on clubs. In fact, HK, SA, CA, SK, and push the
CQ through, and you make 7, because dummy still
has two red aces for entries. But Victor elected
to play HK, CA, SK, C ruff. McDevitt overruffed
and the slam was dead. McDevitt had only red cards left,
any of which would take out one of dummy's aces and kill
the clubs. In fact King went down 2, 13 imps to DeMartino,
who had regained the lead in the match, 84-83.
Board 46 (None vul, E deals):
North
S-AJ96
West H-72 East
S-3 D-AK9 S-KQ2
H-A954 C-A982 H-KQJ108
D-J108752 D-Q43
C-Q5 South C-J7
S-108754
H-63
D-6
C-K10643
East South West North
Doub DeMartino Merblum Becker
1H P 4H Double
P 4S P P
P
Brod Gabay McDevitt King
1H P 3NT* Double
4H 4S P P
P
The Doub team suffered another heavy loss, because McDevitt
led his HA, for +50, while Merblum led an inferior DJ,
for -420, ten more imps to DeMartino, now up by 11, 94-83.
Board 47 (NS vul, S deals):
North
S-Q10832
West H-A842 East
S-AK6 D-J3 S-J94
H-9 C-QJ H-KJ6
D-AQ1095 D-K876
C-10752 South C-A93
S-75
H-Q10753
D-42
C-K864
South West North East
DeMartino Merblum Becker Doub
P 1D P 2D
P 2S P 2NT
P 3NT P P
P
Gabay McDevitt King Brod
P 1D 1S 2S
P 2NT P 3NT
P P P
McDevitt's 2NT with a singleton heart wouldn't
be everyone's choice, but it worked out fine.
King led S3. Pat won dummy's jack, led a diamond
to his hand, and a heart to dummy's king, to make 4.
DeMartino led the H5, so Doub only
made 3, an imp to DeMartino, to lead 95-83.
Board 48 (EW vul, W deals):
North
S-QJ4
West H-Q652 East
S-75 D-83 S-A10983
H-J83 C-A1085 H-A4
D-J9642 D-7
C-964 South C-KJ732
S-K62
H-K1097
D-AKQ105
C-Q
West North East South
Merblum Becker Doub DeMartino
P P 1S Double
P 2H P 3H
P 4H P P
P
McDevitt King Brod Gabay
P P 1S Double
P 1NT P 3NT
P P P
Doub led his singleton diamond against
Becker's 4H. Steve got the kiddies off the street as
quickly as possible, then knocked out the spade ace
and crossruffed for ten tricks, losing only the spade
and two trumps.
King's 3NT was in no trouble, and got better when Brod led the club three. King guessed the hearts, and Brod continued another low club, hoping Patrick had the ten. No luck, making 5, an imp to Doub to stop the bleeding at the three-quarter mark, but DeMartino still led 95-84. There was a brief pause for comparison and strategizing. Eventually Becker-DeMartino opposed Doub-Merblum once again. At the other table, Brod-McDevitt took on King-Stiefel. Board 49 (None vul, North deals):
North
S-965
West H-42 East
S-AQ D-J7653 S-K10743
H-65 C-Q74 H-AQ1087
D-A109842 D-
C-A63 South C-J105
S-J82
H-KJ93
D-KQ
C-K982
North East South West
Merblum DeMartino Doub Becker
P 1S P 2D
P 2H P 3C
P 3H P 3S
P 4S P P
P
McDevitt Stiefel Brod King
P 1S P 2D
P 2H P 3C
P 3H P 3S
P 3NT P 4S
P P P
Doub led the C8, Brod the S2. Neither Stiefel
nor DeMartino found a way to make 4S - they lost three hearts
and a club. I can't find a winning line against best defense either.
It's interesting to speculate about 3NT, the obvious alternative.
If played by West, a heart opening lead from North beats it. Declarer
must finesse with the
spades blocked, must duck a club back, and now a second heart
severs the two hands. West can't recover by clearing spades and
playing DA, Dx to endplay South, because the two rounds
of diamonds squeeze dummy. In the remarkable King-Stiefel
auction, however, 3NT would be played from the diamond void side.
Brod says he would have led the DK. North won't get in
twice early enough to play damaging hearts, so I think
Stiefel might have made 3NT if he guesses to pitch a heart
at trick one and banks on unblocking and running spades and
guesses what to do in the red suits in the right order.
We'll never know how Stiefel would have played 3NT in practice.
Anyway, push.
Board 50 (NS vul, E deals):
North
S-J102
West H-J97 East
S-Q953 D-QJ8643 S-A4
H-AKQ8 C-K H-1065
D-AK D-752
C-Q64 South C-A8732
S-K876
H-432
D-109
C-J1095
East South West North
DeMartino Doub Becker Merblum
P P 2NT P
3C P 3D P
3H P 3S P
3NT P P P
Stiefel Brod King McDevitt
P P 2NT P
3NT P P P
Becker-DeMartino play puppet Stayman over 2NT, so
they can check for both four and five card majors. King
won the diamond lead, went to dummy's spade ace, and
led a club to the queen and king. A diamond came back,
and now he needed the diamonds
6-2, the hearts to come in, and the spade king onside
to recover nine tricks. That all came off, and Victor
lost only three clubs and a spade. Whew!
Becker played towards dummy's CA at trick two. When North's CK
popped up, Steve took ten tricks
without breathing hard to win an imp and up DeMartino's lead to 96-84.
Board 51 (EW vul, S deals):
North
S-Q6432
West H-K4 East
S-1085 D-AJ2 S-K9
H-J1097632 C-KJ2 H-
D-85 D-KQ10974
C-Q South C-A9873
S-AJ7
H-AQ85
D-63
C-10654
South West North East
Doub Becker Merblum DeMartino
P P 1S 2NT
3D* P 3S P
P P
Brod King McDevitt Stiefel
1C P 1S 2D
Double* P 4S P
P P
Once Brod opened that South collection, game
was certain to be reached.
McDevitt picked a bad time to duck Stiefel's
Rusinow DQ opening lead. King played an attitude
D5, Stiefel switched brightly to ace and nine of clubs,
and a nasty defensive crossruff led quickly to down three.
Winning the DA and taking the spade finesse would
have brought home the bacon. I don't know how
Merblum played 3S, but he made 5 for 8 imps,
and reduced DeMartino's lead to 96-92.
Board 52 (Both vul, W deals):
North
S-KQJ87
West H-QJ3 East
S-3 D-1092 S-A1052
H-K542 C-K5 H-1097
D-AK843 D-QJ7
C-AJ9 South C-1043
S-964
H-A86
D-65
C-Q8762
West North East South
Becker Merblum DeMartino Doub
1D 1S P 2S
Double P 2NT P
P P
King McDevitt Stiefel Brod
1D 1S 1NT 2S
2NT P P P
If you were in 3NT, you could make it on best play
with all the defenders' cards in favorable positions, but
in 2NT, neither declarer took any
further finesses once they had eight tricks. Push.
Board 53 (NS vul, N deals)
North
S-A10654
West H-AQ East
S-9873 D-K842 S-J
H-J1084 C-KJ H-K9763
D-Q10 D-653
C-1064 South C-9753
S-KQ2
H-52
D-AJ97
C-AQ82
North East South West
Merblum DeMartino Doub Becker
1S P 2C P
2D P 2S P
2NT P 3D P
3H P 6D P
P P
McDevitt Stiefel Brod King
1S P 2C P
3NT P 6S P
P P
Both North-South pairs bid to fine slams.
McDevitt got a heart lead, so he didn't
need the diamonds to make 7. Merblum got
a club lead and played trumps from the top
to take all the tricks. Two imps to DeMartino,
who led 98-92.
Board 54 (EW vul, E deals):
North
S-K1054
West H-AQJ6 East
S-8 D-K S-
H-1098532 C-10643 H-74
D-854 D-AQ9763
C-AQ8 South C-KJ972
S-AQJ97632
H-K
D-J102
C-5
East South West North
DeMartino Doub Becker Merblum
1D 4S P P
5C P 5D 5S
P P P
Stiefel Brod King McDevitt
2D 2S 3D 4D
5C 5H 6D 6S
P P P
McDevitt's 4D slam suggestion was aggressive with
his misplaced king of diamonds. Brod, who had bid
only 2S with an eight-bagger not vul, envisioned
Pat with perhaps a stiff diamond and three key cards,
or maybe a diamond void with two. Geof would have
Blackwooded had he gotten the chance, but Stiefel
foiled this by following through on his minor suit
strategy. Brod tried to make a sort of last-train
type slam try with his 5H, but I think he fooled both
Victor and Pat into picturing a major two-suiter.
Victor thought Stiefel might have something like the hand he held,
but perhaps with a heart void instead of a spade void.
He took a remarkable vul-against-not 6D save that
was booked to lose 2 imps for down 2 if doubled.
Neither North nor South would expect to score a trump
trick with their holdings on this auction, and Brod's
murky treatment of the South cards
talked the feisty McDevitt into bidding a slam off two aces
and losing 11 imps. This is too fancy an auction for me
to judge - I leave that to readers -
but our match had a new leading team, Doub, by 103-98.
Board 55 (Both vul, S deals):
North
S-K108
West H-A7 East
S-J9 D-KQJ1075 S-AQ532
H-KJ9864 C-J7 H-Q103
D-A3 D-942
C-1084 South C-92
S-764
H-52
D-86
C-AKQ653
South West North East
Doub Becker Merblum DeMartino
P 2H 3D 3H
3S* P 4D P
P P
Brod King McDevitt Stiefel
P 2H 3D 3H
4C P 4D P
P P
Doub's 3S showed clubs, so the auctions are equivalent.
Both Easts led hearts. Becker-DeMartino found their
spade ruff and let nothing get away, for down 2. King-Stiefel
only beat 4D one, 3 imps to DeMartino, reducing the Doub
lead to 103-101.
Board 56 (None vul, W deals):
North
S-K3
West H-KQ986 East
S-1094 D-842 S-J865
H-A2 C-J52 H-7
D-QJ6 D-AK105
C-108743 South C-AQ96
S-AQ72
H-J10543
D-973
C-K
West North East South
Becker Merblum DeMartino Doub
P P 1D 1H
1NT 2D* P 2H
P P 3C P
P 3H P P
4C P P P
King McDevitt Stiefel Brod
P P 1D 1H
2D 3D P 3H
P P P
King led his DQ and this time King-Stiefel took
all their tricks, so Brod was down 1. Understandably,
Doub didn't find the killing low spade lead against 4C.
He led the HJ, and DeMartino won dummy's ace and came
off a club. DeMartino would make 5 by going up ace, but
understandably he finessed his queen. Now Doub could beat
4C two tricks with a low spade out, but understandably
he continued
hearts. Maybe Merblum should have played his HK under
dummy's ace at trick one, as a suit preference for spades.
Rich ruffed and could still make the hand by
guessing trumps, but understandably,
he played his ace, a round too late.
One of dummy's spades went away on the long diamond, but
that was still down 1 and 3 imps to
Doub, to lead 106-101.
Board 57 (EW vul, N deals)
North
S-J73
West H-542 East
S-K852 D-AJ106 S-AQ1064
H-AQ8 C-Q102 H-J763
D-KQ D-42
C-K843 South C-J6
S-9
H-K109
D-98753
C-A975
North East South West
Merblum DeMartino Doub Becker
P P P 1NT
P 2C P 2S
P 4S P P
P
McDevitt Stiefel Brod King
P P P 1C
P 1S P 3S
P 4S P P
P
All roads led to a routine vulnerable 4S.
The club ace was right, and both declarers
avoided the trap of stripping the hand and
tossing South in with the third heart to
give themselves a guess when he underleads
in clubs.
Push at 620.
Board 58 (Both vul, E deals):
North
S-A9
West H-863 East
S-KQ107632 D-K642 S-54
H-102 C-KJ109 H-AQJ94
D-A103 D-7
C-5 South C-Q8764
S-J8
H-K75
D-QJ985
C-A32
East South West North
DeMartino Doub Becker Merblum
P P 3S P
P P P
Stiefel Brod King McDevitt
P P 3S P
4S P P P
Look at Stiefel's remarkable raise! Both Norths led
a zero-or-two higher C10, which held the trick. As the cards
lay, the
only defense that beats 4S is for McDevitt to
play ace and another trump immediately, and Brod to duck
Victor's first heart finesse. This doesn't have
to be a smooth duck - ducking beats the hand even if Geof
gives the show away. But McDevitt was
worried declarer had something like KJ10xxxx Kxx xx x,
or KQ10xxxx Kx xxx x, where releasing the trump ace
would be fatal. So Patrick tried the
S9 at trick two. Nice try, but not good enough.
Victor won and took a heart finesse, and even the smoothest
of ducks wouldn't avail, as Victor would surely take
his diamond ruff next. Brod did the best he could by
winning his HK and switching to a diamond, but Victor
ruffed one diamond and pitched the other on the third
heart before ruffing a club to hand to play trumps.
Would Brod have done better to win his CA at trick one
and play a trump himself? Both King and McDevitt would infer Geof
had the HK to make this play, but perhaps Pat would think
the CK was cashing and go wrong in another way. It's hard to say.
Becker also made four at the other table, but Stiefel earned
11 game bonus imps for Doub, who widened
their lead to 117-101 with six boards to play.
Board 59 (None vul, S deals):
North
S-K87653
West H-Q1085 East
S-QJ D-KJ S-A109
H-AK4 C-9 H-J762
D-AQ76 D-942
C-KJ83 South C-A105
S-42
H-93
D-10853
C-Q7642
South West North East
Doub Becker Merblum DeMartino
P 2NT P 3C
P 3D P 3H
P 3NT P P
P
Brod King McDevitt Stiefel
P 2NT P 3NT
P P P
Becker-DeMartino went through their puppet routine again,
reaching the same inevitable 3NT as King-Stiefel. Merblum
led a spade, McDevitt a heart, but both declarers
scored 10 tricks for a push.
Board 60 (NS vul, W deals):
North
S-J96
West H-K9852 East
S-1084 D-103 S-Q73
H-J7 C-865 H-Q3
D-K952 D-AQ874
C-Q742 South C-1093
S-AK52
H-A1064
D-J6
C-AKJ
West North East South
Becker Merblum DeMartino Doub
P P 2D Double
3D P P Double
P 3H P 4H
P P P
King McDevitt Stiefel Brod
P P 1NT Double
2C 2D* P 3C
P 3H P 4H
P P P
Both non-vul East-Wests tried to disrupt the
auction, Becker-DeMartino with an off-shape
weak 2 and raise, King-Stiefel with a 10-12 notrump
and runout. But both North-Souths powered to 4H,
where they drew trumps and set up a long spade for
a club pitch. Brod wasn't sure whether 2D was a transfer,
but he shakily coped. Push for 620.
Board 61 (Both vul, N deals)
North
S-QJ85
West H-A842 East
S-AK3 D-76 S-10942
H-Q76 C-A102 H-953
D-QJ852 D-10
C-73 South C-Q9865
S-76
H-KJ10
D-AK943
C-KJ4
North East South West
Merblum DeMartino Doub Becker
P P 1D P
1H P 2H P
2S P 2NT P
3NT P P P
McDevitt Stiefel Brod King
1C P 1D P
1H P 2S* P
2NT P 3NT P
P P P
Doub's auction implied a strong notrump with
three hearts. Brod's 2S was fourth suit forcing.
But any rational auction would end in the customary 3NT.
Stiefel led an inefective spade deuce, Becker an
ineffective DQ, but they needed divine
intervention to beat 3NT on this deal. The
declarers both guessed one out of two queens
in the rounded suits, and made 4 for another push.
Board 62 (None vul, E deals):
North
S-QJ
West H-J942 East
S-AK964 D-A106 S-10832
H-63 C-J975 H-AKQ10
D-9843 D-Q
C-Q8 South C-A643
S-75
H-875
D-KJ752
C-K102
East South West North
DeMartino Doub Becker Merblum
1H P 1S P
3S P 4S P
P
Stiefel Brod King McDevitt
1C P 1S P
2S P 3D P
3H P 4S P
P P
DeMartino opened in his powerful 4-card
major. Stiefel's 2S raise showed a good hand.
In the inevitable 4S, both declarers made the
restricted choice play in trumps, to hold
themselves to four for a push at 420.
Board 63 (NS vul, S deals):
North
S-A1074
West H-42 East
S-KQ63 D-93 S-82
H-K1093 C-A10986 H-A875
D-QJ87 D-54
C-7 South C-KQJ53
S-J95
H-QJ6
D-AK1062
C-42
South West North East
Doub Becker Merblum DeMartino
Brod King McDevitt Stiefel
P P P P
Had Becker-DeMartino known they were down 16
with two boards to play, one of them might
have opened here. They can make 110 in 2H
and defeat anything North-South bid over
that.
Board 64 (EW vul, W deals):
North
S-QJ6532
West H-1094 East
S-94 D-86 S-A8
H-Q765 C-K6 H-J8
D-74 D-AKJ10932
C-AJ987 South C-Q4
S-K107
H-AK32
D-Q5
C-10532
West North East South
Becker Merblum DeMartino Doub
P 2S 3NT 4S
4NT P P P
King McDevitt Stiefel Brod
P 2S 3D 3S
P P P
Stiefel cashed two diamonds and shifted to the CQ. King
won his CA and played another club to McDevitt's king.
McDevitt played a trump and Stiefel won and played
another. Curtains. Patrick ran trumps, keeping both
of dummy's clubs. With five cards left, he held S-xx
and H-10xx, dummy H-AKx C-10x, and Victor H-Qxx C-J9.
The next to last trump, pitching dummy's low heart,
trump-squeezed Victor for the ninth trick. Victor could have
avoided this pickle by ducking the CQ return, and
Stiefel could have broken it up by switching to
hearts on winning the spade ace. Minus 140 was a wretched
result for King-Stiefel, misdefending to let a partial make
when they had nine tricks at notrump. When DeMartino
bid his vulnerable game at the other table, Doub wisely
saved in 4S. Becker should
have doubled this for 300 and 10 imps. Instead, Steve took
the push to 4NT. Doub led
his HA and switched to spades. Rich won and ran his
diamonds, but Doub-Merblum
have discarded in these positions before, and they held
the fort all the way for down one. An imp to DeMartino,
but the match to Doub. I make the final score 117-102,
but knowing the result of the match, the players never
formally agreed on the score. They just congratulated each
other all around, the losers wishing the winners luck at the
summer nationals.
So Mr. Impressionist, how would you rate the contestants? Well, nobody was perfect - nobody ever is in 64 board matches. Who am I to rate them? After all, both teams thrashed mine back in the round-robin. However as narrator, I get to see all the cards. Call me Deep Finesse - I'll give kudos where I please. For the winners, Doub-Merblum were their usual very competent selves, and they played throughout. I make them best-in-show. For the losers, I thought Becker-DeMartino did best. In fact, I think they were the second best pair overall. Do readers agree? I want to thank my wife Ann for recording auctions and opening leads at the other table, and several of the players for helping fix errata. Any remaining errors are mine alone. Thanks everybody for letting me watch, and good luck to all four of New England's Grand National teams in Nashville.Boston Nationals News
Other News The Senior Regional was held in North Falmouth, MA April 25-29, 2007, and results have been posted on the results page. The Summer Regional will be in Sturbridge MA June 20-24 at the Sturbridge Host Hotel. The District 25 tournament committee is making some schedule changes for 2007. The biggest is game times of 10 AM and 3 PM for senior events. There will be Compact Knockouts at the Summer Regional. Don't assume 2007 tournament schedules will be the same as 2006. The flyer can be found on the June calendar page. See you there. 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 May 2007. Previous congrats:
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