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Buzz from the Summer Regional in Sturbridge MA District 25 held its Summer Regional in Sturbridge MA this year, during the five days Wednesday June 20 to Sunday June 24. By my count, attendence was up from last year's event in Marlborough - 1450 table sessions compared to 2006's 1109, with 1022 players winning 7186+ masterpoints, compared to 847 winning 5088 last year. I assume that financially this regional was also an improvement. It wasn't me - I could only play the final Sunday in Sturbridge, while I played almost all of Marlborough. Nor was there an influx of out-of-district players. The customary New Yorkers and Canadians turned up, and old friend and national/international star Bart Bramley came all the way from Texas, but most of the increase was due to better attendence among District 25 members themselves. In my view, high attendance isn't the only metric for judging how well the district's regionals are doing. In past columns, I've argued that our less populous and less central districts ought to host occasional regionals. I've also supported events that are good for the game, like the higher flights in the Grand National Teams, even though they're tiny and elitist. Nevertheless, it's interesting to speculate whether this year's rachet upward has a cause other than random fluctuation. Besides the excellent work of the tournament's management, I think Sturbridge's popularity was due to the centrality and quality of the site, and innovations in the schedule of events. Senior events began at 10AM and 3PM, while open games were held at 1 and 7. There were several new and different team games. Both pair and team events featured extensive flighting, seeding, and bracketing. Our I/N attendance was also good. Humans are creatures of habit, however, and a few players complained, preferring the old format. It's harder for our directors to hold novel events at staggered times. Nevertheless, attendance speaks for itself, and Sturbridge mimicked some of the country's most famously large regionals. I doubt New England could ever create a Gatlinburg - we're not central enough. But if I'm guessing correctly, Sturbridge demonstrated that we know how to improve attendence, if that's what we choose to do. OK, so you showed up. But how was your bridge? Mine scored better than it deserved. I'd wandered into what was called Sunday's "bracketed Swiss," although it was a round-robin, not a Swiss movement at all. My favorite partner, my teammates, and my opponents were all battle-hardened (and battle-fatigued!) from several days play, while I was fresh off the street. With neither vul, holding S-8 H-AJ2 D-A5 C-AKJ10874, I heard my RHO open 1S. This hand is too much for a 2C overcall in our style, so I doubled. I had several creative continuations in mind depending on how the auction went, but it didn't. It was my lead to one spade doubled. I once read in a book that when partner passes your takeout double, you should lead trumps, so I mindlessly put the S8 on the table. Put not your faith in books! This lead turned out to be an awful choice:
North
S-
West H-Q10654 East
S-8 D-J9642 S-AJ9763
H-AJ2 C-632 H-97
D-A5 D-K1073
C-AKJ10874 South C-5
S-KQ10542
H-K83
D-Q8
C-Q9
My trump lead squelched my diamond overruff threat, gave declarer
a free finesse he could never take for himself, and failed to show my partner
my unusual distribution. The upshot was that declarer got out for 300, when we
could have made 400 in 5C or 460 in 3NT. If instead of leading that silly
trump, I had started by cashing my two top clubs, partner would
discard the H9. HA, heart ruff, DA, heart ruff, DK, D, and no matter whether
declarer ruffs up with S10 or ruffs low and gets overruffed, he can't escape 800.
However, at the other table, my counterpart settled for a heavy 2C overcall and
scored 150 for 11 tricks, so we won 4 imps despite my horrid lead.
On a similar note, I opened a forcing club with S-KQ6 H-KJ93 D-A753 C-AK, and the auction proceeded (vul against not) : North East South West 1C 2H 2S Pass 3S Pass 4H Pass 4NT Pass 5H Pass 5NT Pass 6D Pass ?When partner cue-bid the HA, I launched into keycard 1430. 5H showed the major aces. My 5NT indicated grand slam interest, promised our side possessed all five key cards and the SQ, and asked for lowest specific king. The 6D bid was quite encouraging. Not being able to count enough tricks for seven, my choices were 6S (partner could still bid a grand if he held extra trumps or another source of tricks), or a more pushy last-train 6H, asking for seven if partner held, for example, the DQ. I settled for the cowardly 6S.
North
S-KQ6
West H-KJ93 East
S-72 D-A753 S-1054
H-42 C-AK H-Q108765
D-J92 D-1086
C-Q108642 South C-J
S-AJ983
H-A
D-KQ4
C-9753
Partner won HA, SA, SK, and then decided a minor-suit squeeze against West or
a diamond break was a better chance than a club ruff in dummy. Our 1460 left
me kicking myself for lack of enterprise. But at the other table, my hand opened
2NT and arrived in 6S without opposing bidding. Here, declarer, probably selecting
the percentage play, tried for a club ruff in the North hand, holding himself to
1430, for one imp to us. The whole day went like that - I kept missing opportunities,
and kept winning small numbers of imps instead of large ones. We won our bracket by
one victory point, so all my sins were washed away.
How good was the bridge during the earlier days at Sturbridge? Take a quiz from the toughest event, the Flight A Knockout that started Friday night (thanks to Yiji Starr for eight interesting situations from this event). The scoring of this quiz will be in imps. Keep a scorecard and see if you won or lost.
1. During Friday night's first round, with neither side vulnerable,
you, East, deal yourself S-xx H-xx D-xxx C-KQJxxx, and hear
East South West North
Pass 1S Double Pass
2C 2H 3D 4H
5D 5H 6D 6H
?
Do you bid, pass, or double?
2. During Saturday morning's second round, vul against not, you, East,
deal yourself S-AQ10x H-x D-AQxx C-AKxx, and hear
East South West North
1D 1H Pass 1NT
Double 2C 2S Pass
?
What's your call?
3. During Saturday afternoon's semifinal, vul against not, you, West,
are dealt S-A953 H-1062 D-K73 C-Q95, and hear
East South West North
Pass 1H Pass 2H
Pass 3C Pass 4C
Pass 4H Pass Pass
Pass
You lead the H2, and see:
North
S-74
West H-A98
S-A853 D-J964
H-1062 C-A863
D-K73
C-Q95
First trick : H2, H8, H3, H4.
Second trick: C3, C2, CJ, CQ.
How do you defend?
4. You make Saturday night's finals. As West, not vul
against vul, you're dealt S-QJ63 H-AJ2 D-A74 C-Q103 in
third chair. The auction goes
East South West North
Pass 1D Double 1H
Pass 1NT Pass Pass
Pass
You lead the S3 and see
North
S-K872
West H-10984
S-QJ63 D-6
H-AJ2 C-K765
D-A74
C-Q103
First trick : S3, S2, S9, S10 (ouch!)
Second trick: HK, ?
How do you defend?
5. With your opponents vul, you, West are dealt
S-J96542 H-J63 D-Q84 C-A. The bidding goes:
North East South West
1C Pass 1H Pass
2NT Pass 4H Pass
Pass Pass
What do you lead?
6. With nobody vul, you, West in fourth seat, hold
S-6 H-932 D-AKJ10872 C-Q10. The auction:
North East South West
Pass Pass 1S 3D
Pass 3H 4C 4H
4S 5D Double Pass
Pass Pass
North leads SQ.
West East
S-6 S-843
H-932 H-AKJ108
D-AKJ10872 D-Q54
C-Q10 C-87
First trick: SQ, S3, S2, S6.
Second trick: C2, C7, CK, CQ.
Third trick: SK, D10, S5, S4.
To your surprise, your feeble falsecard in clubs has
succeded in strong company.
Fourth trick: DA, D3, D4, D9.
Fifth trick: D2, D6, DQ, C3.
Sixth trick: HA, H4, H2, H5.
Seventh trick: S8, SK, D7, S7.
Eighth trick, H3, H6, ?
Do you finesse or play for the drop?
7. Vul against not, you, West, deal yourself
S-52 H-J102 D-KQ8742 C-84. Would you open a weak 2D,
despite the unfavorable vulnerability, or would you pass?
8. With both vul, you, West, deal yourself
S-542 H-K108763 D-5 C-863. The auction:
West North East South
Pass Pass 1C Pass
1H Pass 2NT Pass
3C* Pass 3D* Pass
3H* Pass 4H Pass
Pass Pass
Your 3C demanded 3D, making your 3H a signoff (an
immediate 3H over 2NT would be forcing in your methods).
But partner went to game anyway.
North leads D3.
West East
S-542 S-AQJ
H-K108763 H-Q92
D-5 D-K8
C-863 C-AQJ94
South tops dummy's DK with DA and returns D4. You ruff.
Plan the play.
Now for the answers.
I don't like contrived problems. Winning real life Imp
matches sometimes requires brilliancies, but more often
involves not blowing lots of bread-and-butter decisions.
So I like to record hands from actual New England matches.
Before showing the deals, let me issue the caveat that I
wasn't there, and inaccuracy may have crept into my report
in several ways. But here's what I think happened.
1. If you doubled 6H, as the actual East did, you score +300
and lose 5 Imps. Otherwise, push for +500 at 7H doubled. If you
pass, your partner won't have trouble trying for 1440 when the
alternative is a measly penalty, and North-South won't let your
side play a minor suit grand slam no matter how you bid it.
North
S-xx
West H-Axxxxx East
S-Axx D-xx S-xx
H- C-xxx H-xx
D-AKQxxxx D-xxx
C-Axx South C-KQJxxx
S-KQJxxx
H-KQJxx
D-x
C-x
2. If you drove to 4S, as the actual East did,
+620, winning 10 imps. Otherwise, push at 170. Your
expert partner will accept no invitations, signing
off in 3S over a 3C or 3H cue bid. He has dredged
up a free 2S bid on garbage, and will do no more.
You already know that, because he passed over 1H,
not trying 1S or a negative double. Never pussyfoot
about vulnerable games at Imp scoring. West won't
go down, even against repeated trump leads, because
the diamond finesse works, and he'll score 6 trumps
and your four minor suit winners.
North
S-Jxxx
West H-Kx East
S-K9xx D-KJ10x S-AQ10x
H-J9xxx C-xxx H-x
D-xx D-AQxx
C-xx South C-AKxx
S-x
H-AQ10xx
D-xxx
C-QJ10x
3. If, upon winning the CQ, you returned a club, or a
low spade, or continued a heart as one West did, -420,
losing 10 Imps. If you switched to a diamond, or
cashed the spade ace, saw partner's deuce, and switched
to a diamond, as John Malley did at the other table,
push for +50.
North
S-74
West H-A98 East
S-A853 D-J964 S-10962
H-1062 C-A863 H-53
D-K73 D-AQ82
C-Q95 South C-1072
S-KQJ
H-KQJ64
D-105
C-KJ4
4. Partner has passed throughout, although you know
he has 5-8 points. The only sensible explanation is
that his values are in diamonds, opener's suit.
So, after the unfortunate opening lead, you have
to do two things to beat 1NT - duck the first heart,
and win the next heart and switch to diamonds. It
makes no difference whether you cash your other heart
(partner will work it out), or whether you attack
diamonds by leading low or ace and another. If you
ducked and played diamonds, +100, win 5 Imps. If you
continued spades, -90 for a push. If you switched to
clubs, -120 to lose an imp. If you won the first heart
and played diamonds, as Yiji Starr did, you get squeezed
horribly when partner runs his diamonds, -90 for a push.
North
S-K872
West H-10984 East
S-QJ63 D-6 S-94
H-AJ2 C-K765 H-653
D-A74 D-KQJ52
C-Q103 South C-984
S-A105
H-KQ7
D-10973
C-AJ2
5. If you led the club ace, you'll find the shift to
spades and get two ruffs for +200, win 3 imps. If you
led anything else, -620, lose 13. Don't tell me partner
will win your spade lead and play a club to beat the
hand. The one thing he'll never play you for is singleton
ace of clubs, the lead that hits you in the face. Shame
on you if you talked yourself out of the obvious defense
because this was a quiz.
North
S-K8
West H-AQ East
S-J96542 D-A872 S-AQ10
H-J63 C-KQ972 H-102
D-Q84 D-10953
C-A South C-J853
S-73
H-K98754
D-KJ
C-1064
6. If you finessed, -300, lose 8 imps, as your teammates
were -50 in spades. If you dropped the HQ as Yiji Starr
did, +550, win 11. Yes, a priori the finesse is a better
play, but the bidding tips the odds a little the other way.
Your opponents, who goofed in an easy cashout position,
have only themselves to blame.
North
S-QJ75
West H-965 East
S-6 D-63 S-843
H-932 C-J942 H-AKJ108
D-AKJ10872 D-Q54
C-Q10 South C-87
S-AK1092
H-Q4
D-9
C-AK653
7. If you opened 2D, +50 for a push. If you
passed, -420, lose 10 imps. Even if, after passing,
you lead three rounds of diamonds (best) against 4H,
declarer will guess right, ruffing in hand and crossing
to dummy in clubs to play your partner for Ax in trumps.
If, however, you open 2D, your opponents will either
wander into 5C down 1 (as happened when Dan Colatosti
opened 2D at the other table), or, if they reach 4H,
play you for the doubleton ace of trumps, for the same
down 1. It's a random decision, but that's bridge, mister.
North
S-6
West H-Q65 East
S-52 D-109 S-Q10987
H-J102 C-AKQJ976 H-A4
D-KQ8742 D-A65
C-84 South C-1032
S-AKJ42
H-K9873
D-J3
C-5
8. If after ruffing the diamond, you played a trump, +620 for a push.
If you talked yourself into a club finesse, as one declarer did,
South wins and returns the suit, getting a ruff whenever North wins
his HA, down one and -100, lose 13.
North
S-K7
H-AJ
West D-Q107632 East
S-542 C-1075 S-AQJ
H-K108763 H-Q92
D-5 South D-K8
C-863 S-109863 C-AQJ94
H-54
D-AJ94
C-K2
The scoring's pretty simple - you won, you lost, or you tied.
Boston Nationals News
Other News District 25's next tournament will be the Fiesta Regional August 29 through September 3 at the Connecticut Grand Hotel in Waterbury CT. Sturbridge's schedule innovations will apply in Waterbury. The flyer can be found on the August and September calendar pages. 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 October 2007. Previous congrats:
Back Pages of News May 2007
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