Editors: Cathy Chua and Robert Zajac Bulletin #7

 

43rd PABF Championships - Open Series 2ndRound Robin
 

Ranking (29/6/05)

 

 

 

 

 

VP

 

IMP Quotient

1

China

 

336

 

1.8544

2

Chinese Taipei

 

298

 

1.3603

3

Indonesia

 

287

 

1.2431

4

Australia

 

287

 

1.2311

5

China Hong Kong

 

276

 

1.1612

6

Singapore

 

265

 

1.1248

7

New Zealand

 

264

 

1.0491

8

Japan

 

253.5

 

0.9818

9

China Macau

 

215

 

0.7591

10

Philippines

 

198

 

0.6883

11

Thailand

 

197.5

 

0.7002

12

Korea

 

165

 

0.5707

 
43rd PABF Championships Ladies Series 2nd Round Robin
 

Ranking (29/6/05)

 

 

 

 

 

VP

 

IMP Quotient

1

China

 

335

 

3.0287

2

Japan

 

281

 

1.5665

3

Indonesia

 

273.5

 

1.4948

4

Australia

 

255

 

1.4729

5

New Zealand

 

234

 

1.0865

6

China Hong Kong

 

214

 

0.9651

7

Singapore

 

210

 

0.8716

8

Thailand

 

176.5

 

0.7240

9

Korea

 

142.5

 

0.4824

10

Chinese Taipei

 

82

 

0.2848

 
43rd PABF Championships - Youth Series 2nd Round Robin
 

Ranking (29/6/05)

 

 

 

 

 

VP

 

IMP Quotient

1

Japan

 

260.5

 

1.5662

2

Singapore

 

238

 

1.2903

3

Australia

 

235

 

1.1680

4

Chinese Taipei

 

231.5

 

1.1960

5

China Hong Kong

 

228

 

1.1632

6

Indonesia

 

222

 

1.0977

7

Thailand

 

187

 

0.8533

8

Philippines

 

182.5

 

0.7901

9

Korea

 

110

 

0.4882

 
 
43rd PABF Championships – Senior Series 2nd Round Robin
                               

 

Ranking (29/6/05)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

VP

 

IMP Quotient

1

Australia

 

324

 

2.1701

2

Japan - Yamada

 

296

 

1.7260

3

China

 

284

 

1.4594

4

Chinese Taipei

 

282.5

 

1.4903

5

China Hong Kong

 

270

 

1.2867

6

Indonesia

 

268

 

1.2722

7

Queens & Knight

 

221

 

0.8494

8

Japan - Yokohama

 

216

 

0.8670

9

New Zealand

 

212

 

0.7866

10

Japan - PS Jack

 

210

 

0.7691

11

Japan - Wakasa

 

207

 

0.8049

12

Thailand

 

199

 

0.7422

13

Korea - Ivy League

 

189

 

0.6615

14

Korea - Joy Club

 

161.5

 

0.5553

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Congratulatory Email from BBO
 
From: "David Thompson" <mrdct@amontay.com>
To: <hahn@kcbl.org>; <rozac@netvigator.com>
Cc: <fred@bridgebase.com>; <kordolphin@yahoo.ca>; <bridge@brid Cc: <fred@bridgebase.com>; <kordolphin@yahoo.ca>; <bridge@bridgeshop.com.au>
Sent: Wednesday, June 29, 2005 1:05 PM
Subject: PABF Vu-graph with chinese commentary
geshop.com.au>
Sent: Wednesday, June 29, 2005 1:05 PM
Subject: PABF Vu-graph with Chinese commentary
 
> I think the Chinese commentary for the closed room table this morning was
> a great success.  The attached screen shot may be suitable for the daily
> bulletin.
> 
> As far as I know this is the first time BBO has had Chinese commentary at
> a major event and this will be a wonderful service to our Chinese fans for
¨ª       the rest of the event.
 
From Rick Wakeman here helping out BBO for the Vu-graph matches of the 43rd PABF Championships:
I need operators for the playoffs because we would like to broadcast from 4 tables, anyone who would like to volunteer please contact Rick Wakeman.
It¡¯s not a difficult job and I will be happy to train folks in advance.  Familiarity with the BBO table screen is an asset.
Help us wrap up the 43rd PABF and show the world we hosted the classiest zone championship this year.
                                                                                                  Thanks                         
Rick Wakeman
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
BBO Goes Chinese
 
The VU-Graph crew and Rick Wakeman wish to thank Leo Cheung, NPC of the Open and Youth Teams of China Hong Kong for operating the Closed Room VU-graph.  It was the first ever Chinese broadcast on BBO. 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Rick Wakeman at the helm                                  Leo Cheung of China Hong Kong
 
 
 
 
The Selangor Congress is scheduled for:
20 & 21 August 2005 (pairs & teams)
Royal Lake Club, Kuala Lumpur
Contact: law_david@hotmail.com
This is just one week after an invitational event in Batam (Indonesia) which
 is itself one week after Singapore's Pesta Sukan.

 

RIDDLE FOR THE DIRECTOR – QUESTION

From David Law of Malaysia

 

At one of the duplicate games, while collecting the travellers, the Director was most surprised to find that no scores had been filled in for one set of boards.  Yet all the pairs confirmed that they had played the boards.  What happened?  (Hint: there was a sit-out pair.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Happier Days

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Carol Richardson                                         George Gaspar

of New Zealand                                            of Australia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hands from the Seniors Series

Cathy Chua

 

Seniors Session 12 First Round Robin

 

You pick up:

 

¨£ J74

© AQJ53

¡§ K63

¡× 84

 

and hear:

 

west

north

east

south

Nanjo

McDonald

Nuyazaki

Walsh

 

 

2¡×

Pass

2¡§

Pass

2NT

Pass

3¡×

Dble

3¡§

Pass

3©*

Pass

3NT

All Pass

 

where 3© shows 4© and 5¨£. So what do you lead? Simple, partner¡¯s suit, right? Only IF you noticed her double. For Australia against Japan – PS – Jack, Walsh did not see the double of 3¡× and began with a low heart. This is the layout:

 

Bd 22 

¨£ Q108

 

Dlr E

© 64

 

Vul EW

¡§ 10

 

 

¡× KJ97653

 

¨£ 96532

 

¨£ AK

© 10982

 

© K7

¡§ J87

 

¡§ AQ9542

¡× 2

 

¡× AQ10

 

¨£ J74

 

 

© AQJ53

 

 

¡§ K63

 

 

¡× 84

 

 

3NT down on a low heart¡¦3NT making on a club. With luck like that no wonder the Australians are leading the Seniors.

 

BBO Broadcasting the PABF 3 sessions a day.

Log on and watch.

Championships Live!

BBO in Chinese

 

Bd 30

¨£ A1032

 

Dlr E

© 1063

 

Vul Nil

¡§ J632

 

 

¡× J6

 

¨£ J974

 

¨£ Q865

© K97

 

© AQ

¡§ K108

 

¡§ Q54

¡× 753

 

¡× AKQ4

 

¨£ K

 

 

© J8542

 

 

¡§ A97

 

 

¡× 10982

 

 

Griffin-Hughes for Australia found out they had a spade fit but eschewed it in favour of 3NT played by West, Mike Hughes.

 

The opening heart lead went to the queen and a low spade was won by South perforce. Another heart to dummy and now spades squeezed South¡¦.2 © pitches and a diamond and now all declarer has to do is pick diamonds. So, the Australians have some skill as well as some luck. The senior China team, although not putting in the performance of their Open and Ladies teams, are doing okay and flattened this board, also bidding and making 3NT.

 

Seniors Match 9 First Round Robin

 

Bd 16

¨£ AQ9864

 

Dlr W

© 72

 

Vul EW

¡§ 32

 

 

¡× K43

 

¨£ J72

 

¨£ K

© K1084

 

© AQJ5

¡§ QJ97

 

¡§ 64

¡× 86

 

¡× QJ9752

 

¨£ 1053

 

 

© 963

 

 

¡§ AK1085

 

 

¡× A10

 

 

Lavings, sitting North for Australia, had reached the thin 4¨£ with the knowledge that East had overcalled clubs making the club ruff in dummy a dangerous manoeuvre. After he won the ¡×Q lead in hand he cashed the spade ace. His intention, if low ones were played all around, was to cross to dummy and play one towards the queen. If it transpired that West had ¨£Kxx and rose and continued them, next he would try diamonds as plan B. He also has the possibility of bare jack dropping in which case he can take the club ruff in dummy with the ten since it can only be overruffed with the king. As it was none of this hard work was needed once the king fell under the ace at trick two.

 

In the other room NZ played a spade partial. Australia won the match 23-7 VPs.

 

While we are with the Seniors, this hand is worth a mention.

 

Seniors Round 17 Second Round Robin

 

Bd 6

¨£ KJ62

 

Dlr E

© KQ85

 

Vul EW

¡§ J8

 

 

¡× 653

 

¨£ AQ9875

 

¨£ ---

© 63

 

© AJ942

¡§ K65

 

¡§ AQ43

¡× A10

 

¡× KQ87

 

¨£ 1043

 

 

© 107

 

 

¡§ 10972

 

 

¡× J942

 

 

Scott-Wignall of the NZ team drifted into 6¡§, Wignall received the ©K opening lead, ducked and another heart on which he put the jack. From there he gradually drifted down. ¡®But you were cold¡¯ said partner afterwards. ¡®It¡¯s the only making slam. All you had to do was – (takes a deep breath)

 

Win the first heart, hook the club, cash the ¡×A, cash the ¨£A pitching a heart from dummy. Ruff a spade and then ¡×K dropping West¡¯s last heart on it. Then ruff a heart and ruff a spade. Now a heart off dummy. This is the ending: (top of next column) South must ruff and you overruff. Diamond to hand, draw two trumps, cash the club to which South must follow¡¦

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bd 6

¨£ K

 

Dlr E

© Q

 

Vul EW

¡§ J8

 

 

¡× 3

 

¨£ 875

 

¨£ ---

©

 

© 94

¡§ K65

 

¡§ AQ

¡×

 

¡× Q

 

¨£

 

 

©

 

 

¡§ 10972

 

 

¡× J

 

 

South and North both win the last trick, +1370.¡¯ Aren¡¯t partners just always letting you down? In the other room Thailand played 4NT one down for a flat board. The match result was  14-16 VPs Thailand¡¯s way.

 

Ladies Second Round Robin First match

 

Bd 4

¨£ A542

 

Dlr W

© J862

 

Vul All

¡§ J6

 

 

¡× K63

 

¨£ Q973

 

¨£ KJ108

© A1074

 

© 53

¡§ AKQ2

 

¡§ 1093

¡× J

 

¡× A1092

 

¨£ 6

 

 

© KQ9

 

 

¡§ 8754

 

 

¡× Q8754

 

 

This 4¨£ by Shimamura Kyoko of Japan against Australia was reported to me by NCP Tadashi Yoshida. He was taken by the unusual ending.

 

North began with the ©K to the ace and declarer tried a spade to the king and heart to the queen. Another heart, ruffed by declarer. Now diamond to the ace and another heart ruff, with a club discard from South. A round of spades and another club from South while North won and exited ¡×K won by the ace. Declarer played a diamond to the king leaving this 3 card ending:

 

 

 

 

Bd 4

¨£ 5

 

Dlr W

©

 

Vul All

¡§

 

 

¡× 63

 

¨£ 7

 

¨£

©

 

©

¡§ Q2

 

¡§ 9

¡×

 

¡× 109

 

¨£

 

 

©

 

 

¡§ 87

 

 

¡× Q

 

 

As the last trump was played, South was squeezed in the diamonds and clubs, the ¡§9 giving transport to the clubs. Cute.

 

 

Open Second Round Robin Round Five

 

Those Filipinos stick to me like glue. Here I sat down to watch Indonesia, only to find 2 Filipinos at the table. It was a clash of neighbours one of whom has a wealth of bridge experience, while the other is a ¡®bridge baby¡¯ in comparison. Still, the babies held their own and came out with a 16-16 VP draw. (The score has something to do with board averages. NZ beat China 18 VPs to 15 VPs for the same reason.) There were a few highlights from their point of view.

 

Board 4 looked like a slightly tricky 3NT to me, though it plays okay once you get into it:

 

Bd 4

¨£ J1052

 

Dlr W

© A1064

 

Vul All

¡§ A87

 

 

¡× Q3

 

¨£ 43

 

¨£ KQ76

© Q87

 

© 9532

¡§ Q952

 

¡§ K103

¡× 10987

 

¡× K6

 

¨£ A98

 

 

© KJ

 

 

¡§ J64

 

 

¡× AJ542

 

 

Against Quiquo, North, Polii began with heart to the jack, queen and ace. Declarer was pleasantly surprised when the spade he played to the eight held the next trick. He played a club to the queen and king next and won the heart exit with the king. Club ace and jack already put some pressure on East. He wriggled about – literally – and shed a diamond. Now another club, with diamonds pitched by North and East. West shifted to spades, East splitting this time, and now declarer could see nine tricks as he cashed a club and exited a spade to the king.

 

In Japan-Singapore, Yasuhiro played similar lines against a similar defence. Wong for Singapore had it slightly easier, perhaps, with a spade opening lead.

 

Notice all the defenders wanted to go passive while in fact it was important to try diamonds. Although most got home one way or another in 3NT, in the Open match NZ-China, both declarers failed. In the Open Room South played 3NT and Bach, West for NZ was able to get off to the diamond lead.

 

In the Closed Room MacLeish played it on the ¨£Q lead from Fu Zhong. He won the spade and played a club to the queen and king. East continued a small spade which declarer won to continue clubs. North and East pitched diamonds on the third round¡¦.[11.30pm The records I have been given of the play are not intelligible, I have been unable to contact declarer or his partner, so apologies for not being able to finish the record of play.] All I can report is that he did go down.

 

 

 

Far East Open Pairs

Would any pairs intending to play in this event please register as soon as you can. It is free for participants in the Open, Women¡¯s, Youth and Seniors. We would like to get an idea of numbers and your help would be appreciated.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bd 15

¨£ A

 

Dlr S

© K

 

Vul NS

¡§ AKQJ3

 

 

¡× AQJ1063

 

¨£ QJ1065

 

¨£ 82

© 952

 

© AJ7

¡§ 1094

 

¡§ 8765

¡× K4

 

¡× 9852

 

¨£ K9743

 

 

© Q108643

 

 

¡§ 2

 

 

¡× 7

 

 

Ah, just want a Bulletin Editor likes to see. A hand which will cause angst across the field. In the match featured on BBO Japan-Singapore, which was a small win to Japan, North for Singapore reached 6¡× after having bid nothing but clubs, clubs and more clubs during the auction. So East got off to the ¡®safe¡¯ trump lead and that was the end of that! 5¡× was the contract in the other room: 13 IMPs to Singapore.

 

That ¡×K in East¡¯s hand must have been something bad in a previous life. It is surely getting punished in this one. North for the Philippines, Quiquo, showed a clubs and diamonds, and after an unclear Blackwood auction – was it simple or RKC – ended up in 6NT. East for Indonesia didn¡¯t begin with the cub, but in a moment of madness (as I am sure he would be the first to say) shifted to a club when in with the heart ace. In the other room 5¡× just made and that was 13 IMPs to Philippines.

 

In China vs NZ MacLeish opened the big hand 5¡× and there rested for +600. But in the Open Room: Shi Hao Jun bid the big hand by showing diamonds and then clubs. He made his partner give preference at the 6 level so Zhuang Ze Jun had the miserable duty of giving preference on a singleton. (I can well recall once giving preference on a void¡¦it is an embarrassing thing to have to do).

 

After the spade lead declarer cashed a club and ran one. The heart shift left him down one.

 

Never mind giving preference on a singleton, what about raising to six on a void?!

 

Bd 11

¨£ KJ7

 

Dlr S

© AQ5432

 

Vul Nil

¡§ AK95

 

 

¡× ---

 

¨£ 10952

 

¨£ Q863

© KJ9

 

© 10876

¡§ J86

 

¡§ Q104

¡× A83

 

¡× J7

 

¨£ A4

 

 

© ---

 

 

¡§ 732

 

 

¡× KQ1096542

 

 

Kenji, South, opened 1¡× and from then on he rebid 2, 3, 4 and 5 clubs. That was enough for partner who raised him one for the road. As  you can see it is gin. In the other room the same sort of auction, but the clubs were bid only 4 times¡¦then responder raised to 5. 11 IMPs to Japan.

 

For the Philippines Alejandro opened 5¡×. I was sitting the other side of the screen and watched Quiquo raise to six and then anxiously put dummy down. After the opening lead of  the ©K dummy was greeted with hilarity on all sides. It did not exactly look like the killing lead, but then it transpired that there wasn¡¯t one. Game in the other room: 11 IMPs to the Philippines.

 

Bd 19

¨£ 76

 

Dlr S

© Q8632

 

Vul EW

¡§ K98

 

 

¡× K106

 

¨£ J43

 

¨£ 82

© 95

 

© AKJ104

¡§ AQJ1076

 

¡§ 532

¡× J9

 

¡× A87

 

¨£ AKQ1095

 

 

© 7

 

 

¡§ 4

 

 

¡× Q5432

 

 

west

North

east

south

Hendrawab

Quiquo

Polii

Alejandro

 

 

 

1¨£

Pass

1NT

2©

2¨£

3¡§

Pass

Pass

3¨£

Pass

4¨£

Dble

All Pass

South was begging to be doubled, but her shape was a trick she had up her sleeve. The defence began with the ©9 which held and then ¡§A and another diamond. As declarer pitched on that EW laughed merrily. Never have I seen players treat adversity with the humour of the Indonesians.

 

For the Philippines Alejandro opened 5¡×. I was sitting the other side of the screen and watched Quiquo raise to six and then anxiously put dummy down. After the opening lead of  the ©K dummy was greeted with hilarity on all sides. It did not exactly look like the killing lead, but then it transpired that there wasn¡¯t one.

 

The question on the next board is, how to get to 4©? In fact most NS pairs didn¡¯t even compete. I guess it all depended on the type of auction they faced.

 

Bd 18

¨£ J5

 

Dlr E

© AKQ108

 

Vul NS

¡§ 97

 

 

¡× J1085

 

¨£ KQ4

 

¨£ A10732

© 9753

 

©  J4

¡§ 1084

 

¡§ KQJ2

¡× 432

 

¡× K7

 

¨£ 986

 

 

© 62

 

 

¡§ A653

 

 

¡× AQ98

 

 

At the table I was watching East opened 1¨£, West responded 1NT which I think was forcing. North passed and West corrected 2¡§ from partner to 2¨£ passed back to South. Now Polii likes to balance at least as much as the next man. The trouble with this auction, which is such a nice aspect of the forcing NT response is that the defence doesn¡¯t know whether West has the weak raise or the points with false preference. Equally one can understand North¡¯s failure to come in the first time, at the vulnerability, at least. In any case the Indonesian style is super-sound on the way in, liberal on the way out. Or that¡¯s the impression I get, at any rate. I guess similar dilemmas were faced by the field.

 

One of the two pairs that did manage to get to 4© was pre-empted into it¡¦After Japan began with 1¨£ 2¨£ Wong bid 3© and South, Robinson, has a comfortable raise of that. Even if partner was merely balancing in direct seat, so to speak, his hand is still quite nice.

 

Is there a psychological aspect at work? Those facing a forcing NT have time to decide later what to do. But having left it later auction entry makes it also more dangerous. Then there were those facing a non-forcing NT and I guess they had pleasant thoughts of cashing that heart suit. How often does that happen, though, that one sneakily doesn¡¯t bid a suit hoping to cash it against NT only to find that the moment to bid the suit has gone for ever? Interesting.

 

Board 14 had room for all sorts of things to happen and they did¡¦

 

Bd 14

¨£ J8

 

Dlr E

© A1093

 

Vul Nil

¡§ Q2

 

 

¡× K7632

 

¨£ Q

 

¨£ AK9542

© K6

 

© J74

¡§ K9876

 

¡§ 10543

¡× AQJ54

 

¡× ---

 

¨£ 10763

 

 

© Q852

 

 

¡§ AJ

 

 

¡× 1098

 

 

For Indonesia in the Closed Room it was a straight-forward auction to 5¡§:

 

west

North

east

south

Hendrawab

Quiquo

Polii

Alejandro

 

 

Pass

Pass

1¡§

Pass

1¨£

Pass

2¡×

Pass

2©*

Pass

3¡×

Pass

5¡§

All Pass

 

Yet 5¡§ was only bid 3 times. In the other room in this match the Tobing and Asbi, NS, bought a dreadful 3© contract, 3 down, -150 and 6 IMPs to their side.

 

China-NZ both played a spade partial, after one chose a 3¨£ opening and the other to show it as a weak two.

 

In the Singapore-Japan match Japan stopped in 2¨£ while Heng for Singapore opened 2¨£ weak opposite a more optimistic partner who gave 3NT a whirl.

 

The opening lead was a club. One way or another declarer has 8 tricks, but the ninth? Declarer has to murder one suit to get at the other, whether spades for diamonds or diamonds for spades. He won the club lead and led a small diamond won by the jack. Another club and he won the ace and continued diamonds. After South won and stayed on lead with his last club he shifted to spades. Declarer had 3 spades, 3 diamonds, 2 clubs, but when spades didn¡¯t break, no ninth trick. 6 IMPs to Japan.

 

Indonesian Contract
Bridge Association

would like to thank:

Department of Education

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BANK BUKOPIN

 

Daily Highlights

 

Board 15 from the first match of today contained a defensive gem. Only the pairs of Nagy and Hinge for Australia in the Open Series and the Singapore Ladies Pair of Seet and Foo found the killing defence against 3NT by NS.  This was the deal:

 

Bd 15

¨£ KQ8

 

Dlr S

©QJ105

 

Vul NS

¡§ QJ6

 

 

¡× K63

 

¨£ 52

 

¨£ AJ7643

© AK8762

 

© 94

¡§ K108

 

¡§ 742

¡× 107

 

¡× 52

 

¨£ 109

 

 

© 3

 

 

¡§ A953

 

 

¡× AQJ984

 

 

Hinge

north

Nagy

South

 

 

 

1¡×

2©

3NT

ALL

PASS

 

At the tables North found himself as declarer on East¡¯s lead of ©9, West took his King and played back ¨£5.  Declarer went up with his King which East needed to duck.  When the diamond finessed lost, West continued spades and the defence chalked up eight tricks consisting of five ¨£, 2© and 1¡§

 

There was an interesting twist to the defence.  Had declarer played ¨£8 instead of an honour, East would win with his ¨£J but need to find an immediate switch to a diamond, otherwise declarer could enter his hand with ¡×K (carefully choosing a ¡× higher than the 4 in dummy for this purpose) and forced out the ©A for nine tricks (2©, 1¡§ and 6¡×).  The ¡×6 would provide a secondary entry to cash the two winning hearts.   

 

Board 5 of the second match yesterday saw another interesting defensive problem.  At any table bar one in which the declarer got lost in the play, 4¨£ by North came home at the blink of an eye.  For some reason none of the West helped the defence by coming in with a © overcall despite holding a dilapidated suit and a very poor hand despite the favourable vulnerability.  

This was the deal:

 

Bd 5

¨£ J108643

 

Dlr N

© A83

 

Vul NS

¡§ K96

 

 

¡× A

 

¨£ 52

 

¨£ A

© QJ10742

 

© K8

¡§ J

 

¡§ A1087532

¡× J984

 

¡× 1076

 

¨£ KQ97

 

 

© 95

 

 

¡§ Q4

 

 

¡× KQ532

 

 

Apparently none of the East players on lead hit on the inspired lead of ©K (had his partner not overcalled the suit).  Even had declarer ducked this, it would be a simple matter for East to switch to ¡§A and returned a diamond for partner to ruff to set the contract.  At most tables the lead was ¡§A and a subsequent ¡§ ruff.  Declarer would then go up with his ©A on West¡¯s © return, unblocked ¡×A and ruffed his ¡§K high in dummy to pitch his losing hearts on the top clubs. 

 

Board 16 of the third Senior Match today should have taught old dogs new tricks¡¦if it is not too late.  If ever you are behind and wish to look for swingy deals you¡¯ve got your wish:

 

Bd 16

¨£J1094

 

Dlr W

© 3

 

Vul EW

¡§ 87

 

 

¡× KQJ986

 

¨£ 2

 

¨£ AQ753

© AKQJ94

 

© 7

¡§ AKQ104

 

¡§ 92

¡× A

 

¡× 105432

 

¨£ K86

 

 

© 108652

 

 

¡§ J653

 

 

¡× 7

 

 

Just looking at the West hand which slam would you like to be in, 6©, 7¡§ or 7©?

As it happened six pairs ended up in 6©, three went down.  Those four in 7© stood no chance because even had declarer made use of his x-ray vision (or the finger exercises invented by the Italians) and finessed ©9, the 4-2 diamond break would doom him. 

 

The only playable grandslam must be 7¡§. Three bid it but all failed, guess no pessimists among them.  Because a pessimistic declarer would have been worried about a possible 5-1 © break and took precautions against it, naturally he was not too concern about an overruff since that meant the foul break in © would defeat him anyway. 

 

All declarer had to do was to cash one round of © and ruff a ©, when North showed out but could not overruff dummy, the marked finesse in ¡§ saw him home. 

 

By the way, one EW played in 4© making all thirteen tricks, they probably weren¡¯t too happy with the result until they saw their teammates defeating the opponents¡¯ 7© by two tricks.  That¡¯s bridge!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Round

Date

Starting

Table – Open Series

Time

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

30-Jun

10:00

SIN

-

CHI

IND

-

CHT

CHK

-

AUS

KOR

-

JPN

NZL

-

PHI

CMA

-

THA

8

14:00

CHK

-

CHI

AUS

-

IND

CHT

-

SIN

JPN

-

THA

NZL

-

CMA

PHI

-

KOR

9

17:15

AUS

-

CHI

SIN

-

IND

CHT

-

CHK

CMA

-

JPN

NZL

-

KOR

THA

-

PHI

 

 

Round

Date

Starting

Table – Ladies Series

Time

1

2

3

4

5

7

30-Jun

10:00

AUS

-

CHI

THA

-

JPN

NZL

-

IND

CHT

-

SIN

KOR

-

CHK

8

14:00

CHI

-

IND

CHK

-

JPN

AUS

-

SIN

KOR

-

NZL

THA

-

CHT

9

17:15

CHI

-

JPN

IND

-

AUS

NZL

-

SIN

THA

-

CHK

KOR

-

CHT

 

 

Round

Date

Starting

Table – Youth Series

Bye

Time

1

2

3

4

7

30-Jun

10:00

JPN

-

CHT

AUS

-

IND

PHI

-

SIN

KOR

-

CHK

THA

8

14:00

JPN

-

SIN

CHK

-

AUS

CHT

-

THA

KOR

-

PHI

IND

9

17:15

AUS

-

JPN

CHT

-

SIN

THA

-

PHI

CHK

-

IND

KOR

 

 

Round

Date

Starting

Table – Senior Series

Time

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

30-Jun

10:00

YOK

-

AUS

THA

-

CHT

PSJ

-

CHI

YAM

-

JOY

NZL

-

IND

IVY

-

CHK

WAK

-

Q+K

9

13:30

CHK

-

AUS

CHT

-

WAK

CHI

-

IVY

Q+K

-

YAM

JOY

-

IND

THA

-

YOK

NZL

-

PSJ

10

16:05

AUS

-

IND

NZL

-

CHT

CHI

-

YOK

PSJ

-

YAM

THA

-

CHK

JOY

-

Q+K

IVY

-

WAK

11

18:40

YAM

-

AUS

CHK

-

CHT

Q+K

-

CHI

IND

-

WAK

IVY

-

YOK

NZL

-

JOY

PSJ

-

THA

 

 

 
 

VU-Graph Schedule for Today

 
10:00   Open   Indonesia - Chinese Taipei
12:00   Ladies China - Indonesia
17:15   Open   Australia - China