Unheard
Melody
Bridge is full of might have been’s. This classic example
comes from the match between Italy and Poland.
Board 17. Dealer North. None Vul.
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ª 9 3
© K J 2
¨ K 9 8 6 5 3
§ 9 8 |
ª K 6 2
© Q 8 7 6 4 3
¨ A
§ J 4 3 |
|
ª A J 10 7
© -
¨ Q J 10 7 4 2
§ Q 6 5 |
|
ª Q 8 5 4
© A 10 9 5
¨ -
§ A K 10 7 2 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
Pass |
1¨ |
Dble |
Rdble |
1©* |
1ª |
2§ |
Pass |
Pass |
2¨ |
2© |
Pass |
Pass |
3¨ |
All Pass |
Bocchi bid One Heart because a Pass would have suggested defending
One Diamond redoubled. Why he didn’t double Thee Diamonds
must remain a mystery.
Three Diamonds went two down, enough for a flat board as in the
other room the contract was Two Diamonds doubled down one.
At the time the commentators suggested that the reason Zmudzinski
passed Two Hearts was that he knew his partner would remove the
double – a classic case of VCD – VuGraph Commentators
Disease, ‘being wise before the event’.
However, that may not be the reason, as you cannot defeat the
contract.
Say West leads the ace of diamonds. Declarer ruffs and plays three
rounds of clubs. As long as the ruff is with the jack of hearts
the defenders will be helpless. Now you lead a spade and in due
course you will score a ruff in dummy and, thanks to the preponderance
of trumps in the West hand all three trumps in hand.
The importance of ruffing with the jack of hearts is that if West
subsequently wins an early spade trick then a trump exit will run
to the South hand, whereas a ruff with the two will result in a
fatal blockage.
The Fourth Faroe Sportsman
With 100 Caps
By Svend Novrup
Sportsmen from the Faroe Islands in the stormy Atlantic Sea have
few opportunities to play on national teams. They live far away,
and it is very costly to travel to sports competitions. Until this
day only two chess players and a female volleyball player have had
100 caps, and only just. On Tuesday, Jóannes Mouritzen of
the Open team played his 100th match for the team from Bridgesamband
Föroya, the Faroe Bridge Federation, and he probably will establish
an all time record for all sports before he leaves Malmö.
The small islands up North have only 150-200 tournament bridge
players among their population of 40,000 people, and it is impressive
that they even have several strong pairs to pick their teams from.
In Malmö they were the talk of the first day when the Open
team defeated Iceland 20-10, Germany 19-10 and lost narrowly 14-16
against England, while the Women won 19-11 against mighty Italy
and only lost 14-16 against Norway. A start that made headlines
at home but, of course, this was almost too good. It put a tremendous
pressure on the players for the second day and, after losing just
11-19 to Hungary in the Open series they gave in to nerves. Let
me say that, after the end of day two, the pressure had been taken
off the shoulders of both teams, and we can go hunting scalps in
the normal way again.
Gunnar Mouritzen/Gögni Vesturklett are debutants who only
just left their teenage years, yet they are very talented and have
demonstrated their skills already. Högni (the islanders use
first names) was one of very few who landed this 4© in Round 3 against
Germany:
Board 14. Dealer East. None Vul.
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ª A 4 3 2
© K Q 8
¨ K J 7
§ A J 7 |
ª Q 10 9 7
© J 10 6 5
¨ Q 4
§ K 9 4 |
|
ª -
© A 9 7 3 2
¨ A 9 6 2
§ 8 6 5 2 |
|
ª K J 8 6 5
© 4
¨ 10 8 5 3
§ Q 10 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
Gunnar |
|
Hogni |
|
|
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
1§ |
Pass |
1ª |
Pass |
4ª |
All Pass |
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West opened ©J to the queen and ace, and East returned the suit
to the ten and king, Högni shedding a diamond. Cashing the
ªA, he got the sad news and started his search for some sort of
endplay. He ruffed his last heart, §Q to the king and ace, followed
by two more club tricks. A diamond to the jack and ace and, when
East did not want to solve the diamond suit for declarer and played
a heart instead, Högni threw a diamond from hand and ruffed
in dummy. The ¨K stood up, and he simply played a diamond for West
to ruff on the third last trick. The lead from ªQ10 to the penultimate
trick secured the contract. 10 IMPs to the Faroes when the same
contract failed in the other room.
Of course we need an example of Jóannes’ abilities.
This is Board 15 from the match against Hungary in Round 4 (11-19):
Board 15. Dealer South. N/S Vul.
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ª K 10 9 8 5
© 10 9 8 7 6 2
¨ -
§ 9 6 |
ª J 7 4 3 2
© Q 4
¨ Q 8 6 2
§ 4 2 |
|
ª A
© J 3
¨ A J 7 5 4 3
§ A Q J 7 |
|
ª Q 6
© A K 5
¨ K 10 9
§ K 10 8 5 3 |
West |
North |
East |
South |
|
Hedin |
|
Joannes |
|
|
|
1 NT |
Pass |
2¨ |
3¨ |
3© |
5¨ |
5© |
Dble |
All Pass |
2¨ was a transfer to hearts, and 3© promised three or four hearts.
When West leaped to 5¨ and the tray left his side of the screen,
Jóannes knew what he hoped for: ‘I wished that it would
come back with two passes so that I could double, and I did not
like it at all when instead the bidding was 5© – Dble, but
there was nothing to do except try to make it. West led a spade
to the ace and East switched to the queen of clubs. Without much
hope I put up the King but it won and when both opponents followed
to two top trumps I started to hope. I cashed the ªQ and was disappointed
that East did not follow, but everything was not lost. In this position:
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ª K 10 9
© 10 9 8 7
¨ -
§ 9 |
ª J 7 4
© -
¨ Q 8 6 2
§ 4 |
|
ª -
© -
¨ A J 7 5 4
§ A J 7 |
|
ª -
© 5
¨ K 10 9
§ 10 8 5 3 |
‘I played §3 to the nine and jack, and East was endplayed!
11 tricks, +850 and a gain of 12 IMPs as North/South played in 3©
making 10 tricks at the other table.
That was a nice performance by the record man.
Talking about cards
Arriving at Malmö, I knew that I was going to have some kind
of official function, but not which. When I leafed through the championship
booklet I discovered that I was a journalist. There is a first time
for everything I thought. Wondering what a bridge festival journalist
might do, I decided to do some research on what journalists do at
bridge festivals. First and foremost they write articles. I had
heard that journalists give the articles that they have written
to someone called “the editor”, who either accepts or
refuses to publish them. Concluding that I should probably report
for duty to “the editor” I asked who “the editor”
was. The reply was satisfactory in the respect that I do know who
Martin Nygren is, and unsatisfactory from the point of view that
I am Martin Nygren.
At my disposal I have two battle worn veterans in Tommy Gullberg
and Sven-Olov “Tjolpe” Flodqvist. They do, as usual,
an excellent job in covering the Chairman’s Cup, the Swedish
Championship finals and all side events. With the bridge being well
covered it remains for me to report on interesting non-bridge events
and general gossip. That is not an easy task for a man that is generally
uninterested in gossip. Or to be more accurate, most things that
people gossip about are very interesting to do but not to talk about.
I am afraid that the gossip column will not be up to the standards
that the bridge festival participants are used to.
Talking about non-bridge events, this must be some kind of record
in underbidding:
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ª Q
© K Q J 7 3
¨ Q 9 7 5
§ K Q 6 |
ª 6 4 2
© 10 6 5 4 2
¨ 8 3 2
§ 10 5 |
|
ª J 10 9 8 5 3
© 9
¨ 10 4
§ 9 8 7 3 |
|
ª A K 7
© A 8
¨ A K J 6
§ A J 4 2 |
Eight pairs reached 6 NT! Surely enough the unlucky five-one break
in hearts keeps declarer to only fifteen tricks, but that should
do nicely. If your partner and you - with your favourite methods
- end up in game or a part-score on the above hand, please tell
us the sequence. We can offer a Swan Bridge voucher in exchange
for the information.
Sweden’s NPC Jan Kamras showed off a cunning piece of coaching
yesterday evening. All players on the team wanted to see the Sweden-Denmark
game but the schedule was a bit tight to make it back in time for
the kick-off. To increase the odds of finishing of the bridge in
time, Kamras decided to side-step P-O Sundelin.
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