Hand
of the day
The Norsemen were very impressive when they
whitewashed Finland 25-0 (104-7) in Round 3 in a match with many
instructive hands. Board 18 was one of them:
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ª K 6 5 2
© 3
¨ Q J 9 3 2
§ A Q 4 |
ª Q 9 8
© K Q 7 6
¨ A K 8 4
§ J 6 |
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ª A 10 7 4 3
© A 10 9 5
¨ 7
§ 10 3 2 |
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ª J
© J 8 4 2
¨ 10 6 5
§ K 9 8 7 5 |
Sitting East-West Tor Helness - Geir Helgemo
bid to 4© which
was the usual contract even if some pairs played in partscores
- and one West went one short in 2©!
Both major suits presented declarer with problems, and at many
tables West went astray.
The usual lead was ¨Q,
and after winning West usually cashed a top trump. At many tables
South remembered that ©8
is a compulsory false card and was rewarded when West continued
with ©Q. South
did not do it against Helgemo who continued a heart to ©A,
finessed for the knave, drew South's last trump and "just"
had to play the spades with no loser. No problem. ªQ
from the hand finessed the king and scooped the knave. 11 tricks
in a contract which failed in the other room. 11 IMPs to Norway.
On VuGraph Swedish Johan Sylvan like Helgemo
cashed a top heart in trick two. Here, too, there was no false
card, and when he played ªQ
immediately, he got all the news he could ask for, winning his
contract. In the other room Duboin got the trumps right, too,
cashing ©K and
©A but then he
played a spade to J, Q and K and was lost. 11 IMPs to Sweden.
Little
Anna
Poland have a completely new Women's team
at these championships, including a pair who won the Polish Junior
Championship, 'Big' Anna Grunt and 'Little' Anna Sarniak. Little
Anna showed showed some of the style that has led to their success
on these two deals from the third session of the Ladies Pairs
qualifying.
Board 5. Dealer North. N/S Vul.
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ª 6 5 4 3 2
© 2
¨ J 4 3 2
§ 9 8 2 |
ª K 7
© K Q J 7
¨ 7 5
§ K Q J 7 6 |
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ª 10 8
© 9 6 3
¨ A Q 9 8 6
§ A 10 4 |
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ª A Q J 9
© A 10 8 5 4
¨ K 10
§ 5 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Sarniak |
|
Grunt |
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Pass |
Pass |
1© |
2§ |
Pass |
2© |
Pass |
3NT |
All Pass |
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On a spade lead, 3NT would make exactly,
with declarer breathing a very big sigh of relief on discovering
that the suit is blocked. However, North led her singleton heart
and South won the ace to switch to the queen of spades. Little
Anna had little option but to put up the king and when it held
she cashed five rounds of clubs and three hearts. That brought
South down to the ace of spades and king doubleton diamond. Everything
pointed to the actual position and Anna exited with her remaining
spade to endplay South, forcing a lead into the diamond tenace
at trick twelve; eleven tricks for +460 and an excellent matchpoint
score.
Board 22. Dealer East. E/W Vul.
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ª J 10 3
© K 10 6
¨ Q J 10
§ Q 9 5 2 |
ª A 7 5 4
© 2
¨ 9 8 6 3
§ A J 10 7 |
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ª Q 9 6 2
© A J 5 3
¨ K 5 4
§ K 4 |
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ª K 8
© Q 9 8 7 4
¨ A 7 2
§ 8 6 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Sarniak |
|
Grunt |
|
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1§ |
1© |
1ª |
Dble |
2ª |
All Pass |
Again a different opening lead would have
made things much better for the defence, with a diamond being
the winning choice. However, North tried a low heart and Little
Anna rose with the ace and played a spade to the ace then ducked
a spade to South´s king. South exited with a low heart and
declarer ruffed and continued with the king of clubs, a club to
the ace and the ten of clubs, pitching a diamond when North played
small. A club ruff, a second heart ruff, and the queen of spades
meant nine tricks for +140 and another bundle of matchpoints.
The two Annas qualified for the final in a comfortable thirteenth
place.
Ladies
Pairs 2nd session
Board 12, Dealer West, N/S Vul.
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ª A
© 8 7 2
¨ A J 10 9 6
§ K 10 8 7 |
ª J 9 8 7 6
© 10 6 5
¨ K 3
§ A 6 5 |
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ª 5 3 2
© A K 9 4
¨ 4
§ J 9 4 3 2 |
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ª K Q 10 4
© 8 7
¨ J 10
§ 9 3 |
Pascaline Delacour from France showed a textbook
performance on this hand right from the textbooks. She was in
3NT against a spade lead and no opposition bidding.
Dummy´s ace won and trying to reach
her hand for the diamond finesse, she led a club to the queen.
If East would have the ace, she would probably duck, and with
West winning the ace the heart weakness would be protected. West
duly won the §A
but returned a club. Declarer put in the ten, but East won the
jack and returned a spade, not unexpectedly.
The rest was plain sailing. The diamond finesse
was successfully taken, declarer taking care to unblock the suit
. This way, she could cash the last spade as well before getting
off play with a low heart to East who had been squeezed in the
meantime, having been forced to come down to only one top heart
in order to protect her club stopper. However, when the low heart
was led off dummy at trick 11, East had to win and to surrender
the last two tricks to dummy in clubs again. Well played for a
juicy overtrick.
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