England - Germany 3:4
By Stefan Back
Although England scored a convincing 21:9 - victory over Germany
in round 14, the Germans had their moments as well. On board 11
Tomasz Gotard and Josef Piekarek, winners of the Schiphol Teams
2002, found a defence that - at the time - could have been a prediction
of the score of the soccer world cup final between these two countries.
(We think you mean 4-3 Stefan! Editor)
Board 11. Dealer South. None Vul.
|
|
ª A Q 10 3 2
© K 6 2
¨ 8 7 3 2
§ Q |
ª J 6
© 10 7
¨ A Q 10 6 4
§ 9 7 4 2 |
|
ª K 8 4
© Q J 5 4
¨ J 9 5
§ A 6 5 |
|
ª 9 7 5
© A 9 8 3
¨ K
§ K J 10 8 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Piekarek |
P. Hackett |
Gotard |
Waterlow |
|
|
|
1§ |
1¨ |
1ª |
Dble |
Rdble |
2¨ |
2ª |
3¨ |
Pass |
Pass |
4ª |
All Pass |
|
After Gotard had led ¨9 to the king, ace and 7, Piekarek returned
©10 to declarers king. North continued with §Q to East's ace, who
now played back ©Q to the ace. After §KJ, North discarding a heart
and a diamond, declarer called for dummy's ©8.
|
ª
A Q 10 3 2
© -
¨ 8 3
§ - |
ª
J 6
© -
¨ Q 10 6 4
§ 7 |
|
ª
K 8 4
© J 5
¨ J 5
§ - |
|
ª
9 7 5
© 9 8
¨ -
§ 10 8 |
Piekarek ruffed high with ªJ, declarer overruffed with the queen
and East contributed ©J (!) to make sure West ruffed the next heart.
North then ruffed ¨3 and played his winning heart from dummy. Piekarek
knew to insert ª6, which declarer had to overruff with ª10 to be
able to trump his last diamond in dummy.
|
ª
A 3 2
© -
¨ -
§ - |
ª
-
© -
¨ Q 10
§ 7 |
|
ª
K 8 4
© -
¨ -
§ - |
|
ª
9
© -
¨ -
§ 10 8 |
Declarer continued with ª9 to his ª2 and East's king. East's ª8
now forced out North's ace, which meant that the last trick "saw"
the final score:
England: ª 3
Germany: ª 4
Down one and a perfect trump promotion, which led to a 6 IMP gain
for the Germans, when in the other room North/South scored a part
score in spades.
Match Winner
This deal from Round 14 gave a former Bulletin Editor a chance
to write his own story.
Board 8. Dealer West. None Vul.
|
|
ª J 10 9 7
© J 8 5 2
¨ 2
§ 7 4 3 2 |
ª 4 2
© K Q 7 4
¨ K 10 8 5
§ A Q J |
|
ª K Q 8 6 3
© A 9
¨ A Q 4 3
§ 8 5 |
|
ª A 5
© 10 6 3
¨ J 9 7 6
§ K 10 9 6 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Mraz |
Ratcliff |
Kurka |
Jourdain |
1¨ |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
1NT |
Pass |
2§* |
Dble |
2¨* |
Pass |
3¨ |
Pass |
3NT |
Pass |
4¨ |
Pass |
4© |
Pass |
4NT* |
Pass |
5© |
Pass |
6¨ |
All Pass |
Two Clubs redoubled would have been a pleasant spot for East /West
but South survived his ambitious entry into the auction.
North naturally led a club to the king and ace and declarer played
the five of diamonds for the two, ace and nine. Declarer now played
the three of diamonds from dummy and when South followed with the
six he went into deep thought before eventually playing the king
and conceding one down.
Tomas Mraz recalled that he had attended the junior camp in Fiesch
some years ago when Patrick Jourdain was one of the lecturers. He
turned to Patrick and said, 'You were giving me lessons then and
you are still giving me lessons now!'
It gave Wales 11IMPs as the result at the other table was 3NT+3
- and they only won the match 58-41.
When the Faroe Islands
caused a sensation
By Svend Novrup
The Faroe Islands is situated in the North Atlantic and has a population
of around 45,000 inhabitants. Its has its own parliament but being
in a union with Denmark it was not until 1980 that the bridge federation
of the Faroes which was founded in the sixties was allowed to participate
in the Nordic Championships. This was a tough task as the three
Scandinavian countries and Iceland are of big general strength,
and ahead of these championships the Faroes had defeated Denmark
five times and Finland once as their only victories.
Eight months ago it was decided to try and make the European Championships.
The costs were huge and seemingly completely out of reach but splendid
support from Giannarrigo Rona and the Italian Bridge Federation
(sponsoring expenses in Salsomaggiore) cut down the amount so much
that with support of Landsstyret (the Faroe "government")
and several sponsors in addition to hard work from the players,
raising about 20,000 euros themselves, in the end made it possible
for two teams to enter.
The determined work started in November with the decision to ban
any drinking of alcohol during the training as well as the weeks
of the championships and a decision to work on the physical and
mental side as well as the bridge. Friends in Denmark set up a four
country event over Easter in Graasten, Denmark, in which both Faroe
teams met with Denmark, Sweden, and Germany. An invitation to the
Bonn Nations Cup followed, and here the team defeated Sweden 21-9
and Czech Republic 25-5 as the best of several good results which
boosted their confidence. These experiences were of great value,
and it was two very motivated teams which arrived in Salsomaggiore
ready to show great determination but also wanting to show that
they can go through the full event with three functioning pairs
in both series and be just as fresh at the finish as in the beginning.
It was a tough start, 0-25 against Italy but they did not expect
much there, and now they sort of got the feel of the championship.
After 9-21 against Czech Republic and 11-19 against Lebanon they
even started to win: 20-10 against Portugal and 19-11 against Slovenia.
Already at this point the results made headlines at home. Following
nice results like 10-20 against France and Israel they were ready
to deliver a real blow: 18-12 against Russia.
In the meantime the women had started. The Faroe ladies team had
lost 47 out of 48 matches ahead of Salsomaggiore but now got off
to a 15-15 against Czech Republic followed by a sensational win
against the Venice Cup silver team from France - in the same round
as the open victory against Russia. Can you imagine what it means
to a tiny nation to defeat Russia and France at the same time in
the same sport? The players are now media stars, and others may
just as well take note of them:
Open: Bogi Simonsen - Roi Joensen, Hedin Mouritzen - Joannes Mouritzen,
Arnbjoern Sivertsen - Hans-Jacob Petersen. Npc: Finn Ougaard.
Ladies: Marjun Restorff - Arnleyg Mikkelsen, Laila Danielsen -
Maria Christiansen, Majken Johansen - Jona Grunnveit. Npc: Mortan
Rasmussen.
I am the coach of both teams and have been guiding their training
since the start in November.
We have established a lot of Faroe records. Whenever Marjun (usually
only first names are used in the Faroes) or Joannes play, they establish
a new record of caps. Joannes started with 53 caps and will get
to 75 before the finish. Marjun had 43 and celebrates her 50th cap
Saturday, just to mention some of them.
A couple of hands. Against Poland Bogi - Roi had a dream of playing
Balicki - Zmudzinski fulfilled, and they did so with no respect.
They played a lot of very steady bridge, and already board four
was very nice.
Board 4. Dealer West. All Vul.
|
|
ª A K Q 10 4 2
© 9 6 2
¨ K 9
§ 8 3 |
ª -
© Q J 10 5 4
¨ 8 5 2
§ A Q 10 7 4 |
|
ª J 5
© A 3
¨ Q J 7 3
§ J 9 6 5 2 |
|
ª 9 8 7 6 3
© K 8 7
¨ A 10 6 4
§ K |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Balicki |
Bogi |
Zmudzinski |
Roi |
2©* |
2ª |
Dble* |
4ª |
Pass |
Pass |
4NT* |
Pass |
5§ |
Pass |
Pass |
Dble |
All Pass |
|
|
|
The double of 2ª
showed minors and 4NT carried the same message. North - South not
only did their best by doubling but extracted the maximum penalty.
ªA was ruffed by
West who ran the ©
Q to ©K. Roi now
brilliantly worked out that his partner held Kx in diamonds and
switched to a low diamond. ¨K,
¨A, and a diamond
ruff meant down two and 500 for the Faroes who never the less lost
on the board when East-West did not sacrifice against 4ª
at the other table.
The most amusing hand, however, was when Bogi tried a deceptive
"comic NT" (not in the system)!
Board 7. Dealer South. All Vul.
|
|
ª K 5
© 6 3
¨ A K Q 8 4 3
§ 10 8 6 |
ª A J 10 9 2
© Q
¨ J 6 2
§ A J 3 2 |
|
ª 8 7 6
© A K 10 9 8 7 5
¨ 9
§ K 9 |
|
ª Q 4 3
© J 4 2
¨ 10 7 5
§ Q 7 5 4 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
Balicki |
Bogi |
Zmudzinski |
Roi |
|
|
|
Pass |
1ª |
1NT |
Dble* |
All Pass! |
The double showed a hand with one long suit.
Now, opening with the fourth best of the longest suit could have
netted East-West 1400 but when East cashed a top heart they could
get no more than six tricks. Roi made certain that Bogi recognized
how well it was that he had a heart stopper. +180 to the Faroes.
In the other room E-W bid and made 4ª
for another 620 to the Faroes. 13 IMPs to the islanders.
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