In the mountains
A good defense in the closed room was beaten by an even better
one in the open. It happened when Spain met The Netherlands in Round
Three of the open.
Board 2. Dealer East. N/S Vul.
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ª 7
© Q
¨ A K J 9 7 6 5
§ J 7 6 3 |
ª A K 2
© A 10 9 8 5 4
¨ 4 2
§ Q 4 |
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ª J 9 6 5 3
© 3
¨ Q 10
§ A 10 9 5 2 |
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ª Q 10 8 4
© K J 7 6 2
¨ 8 3
§ K 8 |
Closed room |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Torres |
De Wijs |
Frances |
Muller |
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Pass |
Pass |
1© |
2¨ |
dbl |
Pass |
2© |
3¨ |
Pass |
3NT |
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
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José Ignacio Torres led a top spade, saw the dummy and went
into the tank. When he finally got out of it, he did the right thing:
tabling the §Q. Declarer won the king, played a diamond to the ace
and the ©Q. West won the ace and continued in clubs. A smooth down
one. Good defense though a diamond switch at trick two and a possible
diamond continuation would do also, since declarer is bound for
a suicide squeeze. Still, in the open room defense did even better,
much better:
West |
North |
East |
South |
Jansma |
Ventin |
Verhees |
Lantaron |
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2ª
* |
Pass |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
Pass |
3ª |
Pass |
Pass |
dbl |
Pass |
3NT |
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
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* "Muiderberg": five spades and a minor, 0-7 HCP
With his seven bagger Juan Carl Ventin didn' t want to stand his
partner's double, but tried 3NT. The spade lead by East went for
the ten and the king. Like in the closed room Jan Jansma switched
to §Q. Declarer won the king and, in view of the bidding, not unreasonable
played a diamond to the jack. When the smoked cleared 3NT was "five
in the mountains" as they say in Holland.
Tough defense
The Netherlands had a great start in this championship. They even
took the lead after four rounds. In the fifth round however, due
to a 9-21 loss to Scotland, they fall back a little. This is one
of the boards on which the Scots did an excellent job by putting
the preisure on Jan Jansma who was faced with a tough defensive
problem:
Dummy
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ª
A 10 6 3
© J 10 7 4
¨ A 5 3
§ 6 4 |
ª
K 7 4
© 9 6
¨ J 10 9
§ A K 10 7 3 |
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Jansma as West heard this bidding:
West |
North |
East |
South |
Jansma |
Dragic |
Verhees |
Diamond |
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2©
* |
Pass |
4© |
All Pass |
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* 5© and a five card in a minor, 5-10 HCP
Jansma led the §K and saw the nine with his partner and the eight
with declarer. East-West play upside down count, so declarer could
easily have a stiff club. Moreover, Louk Verhees might not have
pitched the §Q from his five card, suggesting a spade shift, in
the case that he had nothing useful in spades.
Knowing nothing better, Jansma continued the suit. Wrong:
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ª
A 10 6 3
© J 10 7 4
¨ A 5 3
§ 6 4 |
ª
K 7 4
© 9 6
¨ J 10 9
§ A K 10 7 3 |
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ª
J 9 8 2
© A 8
¨ K 6
§ Q J 9 5 2 |
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ª
Q 5
© K Q 5 3 2
¨ Q 8 7 4 2
§ 8 |
Derek Diamond ruffed and played a heart to the jack. East won the
ace, returned a heart and now declarer played ¨A and another diamond.
Verhees came in with the ¨K and played a low spade. Diamond guessed
that one - Jansma did not switch to a spade at trick two - and made
his vulnerable contract, which was 'missed' at the other table.
Afterwards, Jan Jansma, was the first to admit that he should have
switched to a diamond at trick two. The best declarer could do then
is to raise with the ace and play the ©J, suggesting a finesse in
trumps. If East ducks, declarer still makes his contract by ruffing
a club and exit with a heart.
Leonid & Louk
Only 5 IMPs at stake at this one, but still:
Open series, Round 5
Board 10. Dealer East. All Vul.
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ª K 10 5 4 3
© J 8 6
¨ K
§ 8 4 3 2 |
ª J 8 7 6 2
© Q 5 4
¨ 6 3
§ Q 9 5 |
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ª Q
© A 10 3
¨ A J 10 8 5
§ A 10 7 6 |
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ª A 9
© K 9 7 2
¨ Q 9 7 4 2
§ K J |
Israel versus England, closed room
West |
North |
East |
South |
Kalish |
Justin H. |
Podgur |
Jason H. |
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1¨
* |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble (!) |
Redble ** |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2§ |
All Pass |
* Precision, three or more diamonds
** Good hand
Justin Hackett's balancing double would certainly not be anyone's
choice, but was quite understandable though. His partner (and brother)
Jason easily could have a penalty pass. And in fact he had. It all
ended quiet, though the play in 2§ was at some interest. South led
a low heart for jack and ace and Leonid Podgur returned the suit
immediately. South won the king and another heart was for dummy's
queen. Next came a diamond for king and ace. The ¨J was played,
taken by South, who continued with ªA and another spade, ruffed
by East. Declarer played the ¨10 ruffed by North, who returned a
spade, ruffed with the ten and overruffed with the jack. Later declarer
did not find the king bare of trumps and went down one.
Scotland versus The Netherlands, open room
West |
North |
East |
South |
Jansma |
Dragric |
Verhees |
Diamond |
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1¨
|
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
2§ |
Pass |
All Pass |
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Derek Diamond led his ªA and played another spade for jack and
king. Louk Verhees ruffed and played a low heart. South won and
returned the suit. Verhees won the ace, crossed to dummy with the
©Q and played a diamond for king and ace. He then tried the ¨10,
ducked by South and ruffed by North, who continued with a spade.
Verhees ruffed with the ten, Diamond overruffed with the jack and
returned a diamond. Verhees ruffed with the nine in dummy and played
a club to his ace, noting the drop of the trump king. Now the contract
was made. Verhees ruffed another diamond with the Queen and played
a spade, scoring the seven of trumps en passant. Well timed play
by Louk Verhees.
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