Poland v 
              Israel – Juniors Round 23 
            It seemed that nothing could stop the remorseless march of the 
              Polish Juniors to the European Championship, until, that is, they 
              met Israel in Round 23 and suddenly, a Championship that had appeared 
              to be almost decided, was very much alive again. 
            
| 
Board 1. None Vul. Dealer North.
 | 
 
|   | 
ª Q 7 4 
© 10 3 
¨ 9 8 3 2 
§ A 9 8 6 | 
 
ª J 8 5 
© 9 8 7 4 
¨ A K J 4 
§ 4 3 | 
  | 
ª A K 9 6 2 
© A K Q 
¨ 5 
§ K J 5 2 | 
|   | 
ª 10 3 
© J 6 5 2 
¨ Q 10 7 6 
§ Q 10 7 | 
 
 
            
             
               
                | Closed Room | 
               
               
                | West | 
                North | 
                East | 
                South | 
               
               
                | Buras | 
                Hoffman | 
                Araskiewicz | 
                Ofir | 
               
               
                | - | 
                Pass | 
                1§ | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 1© | 
                Pass | 
                2¨ | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 2© | 
                Pass | 
                2ª | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 3ª | 
                Pass | 
                4§ | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 4¨ | 
                Pass | 
                4NT | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 5§ | 
                Pass | 
                5¨ | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 5© | 
                Pass | 
                5ª | 
                All Pass | 
               
             
            
             
               
                | Open Room | 
               
               
                | West | 
                North | 
                East | 
                South | 
               
               
                | Reshef | 
                Kalita | 
                Ginossar | 
                Kotorowicz | 
               
               
                | - | 
                Pass | 
                1ª | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 2ª | 
                Pass | 
                2NT | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 3§ | 
                Pass | 
                3¨ | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 3ª | 
                Pass | 
                4ª | 
                All Pass | 
               
             
            A long Polish Club auction seemed to be wending its way to a very 
              poor slam contract but Buras/Araskiewicz put on the brakes at the 
              five level. Mind you, as we were about to discover, 5ª was by no 
              means a secure spot. Gilad Ofir led a diamond and Konrad Araskiewicz 
              rose with the ace and played a club up. When Ron Hoffman played 
              low smoothly, Araskiewicz guessed to put in the jack, losing to 
              the queen. He won the diamond continuation with the king and led 
              a second club, Hoffman taking the ace. To make the contract, declarer 
              has to lead the ªJ to pin the ten, and there is no good reason to 
              do that. When Araskiewicz played trumps from the top he was down 
              one for –50. 
            In the Open Room, Eldad Ginossar/ Ophir Reshef were never in danger 
              of getting past the four level after Ginossar's natural 1ª opening 
              attracted a simple raise from Reshef. Ginossar could explore at 
              a safe level then stop in game. There was to be no problem with 
              the spade guess at this table, where it did not matter. Krzysztof 
              Kotorowicz led a trump and that ran to declarer's nine. Naturally, 
              he got everything else right now and emerged with twelve tricks 
              for +480. What's the problem? That gave Israel an 11 IMP start to 
              the match. 
              Little happened over the next few boards and Israel led by 18-5 
              after nine deals. 
            
| 
Board 10. All Vul. Dealer East
 | 
 
|   | 
ª 4 3 
© A Q 5 3 
¨ K J 7 4 
§ J 5 3 | 
 
ª A K 10 6 5 
© 10 8 4 
¨ A Q 
§ K 9 6 | 
  | 
ª Q 7 
© 7 6 2 
¨ 6 5 3 
§ A Q 10 8 4 | 
|   | 
ª J 9 8 2 
© K J 9 
¨ 10 9 8 2 
§ 7 2 | 
 
 
            
             
               
                | Closed Room | 
               
               
                | West | 
                North | 
                East | 
                South | 
               
               
                | Buras | 
                Hoffman | 
                Araskiewicz | 
                Ofir | 
               
               
                | - | 
                - | 
                Pass | 
                Pass | 
               
               
                | 1NT | 
                Pass | 
                3NT | 
                All Pass | 
               
             
            
| Open Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Reshef | 
Kalita | 
Ginossar | 
Kotorowicz | 
 
| - | 
- | 
Pass | 
Pass | 
 
| 1ª | 
Dble | 
Pass | 
2¨ | 
 
| All Pass | 
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
 
 
            Krzysztof Buras opened 1NT and was raised directly to game. Not 
              wishing to lead into a strong hand on his right from a broken four-card 
              suit, Hoffman chose to lead his doubleton spade. That picked up 
              that suit rather nicely for Buras, who cashed his eleven top tricks 
              for +660. 
            At the other table, Reshef opened 1ª and Jacek Kalita's double 
              silenced Ginossar. Kotorowicz was left to play 2¨ as South, a contract 
              that played very nicely for him despite the shortage of high cards 
              his way. The defence did not take its club tricks and the very favourable 
              diamond position enabled Kotorowicz to come to an overtrick for 
              +110 and 13 IMPs to Poland. The teams were level at 18-18 at the 
              midpoint in the match. 
            
| 
Board 15. N/S Vul. Dealer South.
 | 
 
|   | 
ª J 10 4 2 
© J 5 
¨ K Q 9 6 2 
§ A 9 | 
 
ª A 7 
© Q 8 
¨ J 10 4 
§ Q J 7 6 5 3 | 
  | 
ª Q 3 
© A 9 7 3 
¨ A 8 7 5 3 
§ 10 8 | 
|   | 
ª K 9 8 6 5 
© K 10 6 4 2 
¨ - 
§ K 4 2 | 
 
 
            
| Closed Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Buras | 
Hoffman | 
Araskiewicz | 
Ofir | 
 
| - | 
- | 
- | 
2© | 
 
| Pass | 
2ª | 
Pass | 
Pass | 
 
| 3§ | 
3ª | 
Pass | 
4ª | 
 
| All Pass | 
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
 
 
            
| Open Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Reshef | 
Kalita | 
Ginossar | 
Kotorowicz | 
 
| - | 
- | 
- | 
2© | 
 
| All Pass | 
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
 
 
            Kotorowicz showed hearts and a second suit, and Kalita passed, 
              which would have been the right thing to do facing hearts and clubs, 
              of course. After a club lead, Kotorowicz could ruff his third club 
              and get the spade right, eventually scrambling eight tricks as the 
              defence could not quite weaken his trump control sufficiently to 
              defeat him; +110. 
            Ofir showed the majors and Hoffman gave preference then competed 
              to 3ª when Buras balanced with 3§. Knowing that his partner held 
              genuine spade support was sufficient to convince Ofir, who was much 
              better than he might have been, to take a shot at game. Hoffman 
              won the club lead in hand and ran the ªJ, after which he was quite 
              comfortable; +650 when he later picked the heart suit correctly 
              also, and 11 IMPs to Israel. 
            
| 
Board 19. E/W Vul. Dealer South.
 | 
 
|   | 
ª A K J 5 2 
© A 8 
¨ A 4 3 
§ A J 2 | 
 
ª 10 6 
© K 10 5 
¨ K Q 10 7 6 
§ K Q 9 | 
  | 
ª 8 7 4 
© J 7 6 4 3 
¨ J 5 
§ 6 4 3 | 
|   | 
ª Q 9 3 
© Q 9 2 
¨ 9 8 2 
§ 10 8 7 5 | 
 
 
            
| Closed Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Buras | 
Hoffman | 
Araskiewicz | 
Ofir | 
 
| - | 
- | 
- | 
Pass | 
 
| 1¨ | 
Dble | 
Pass | 
1© | 
 
| Pass | 
2NT | 
Pass | 
3NT | 
 
| All Pass | 
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
 
 
            
| Open Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Reshef | 
Kalita | 
Ginossar | 
Kotorowicz | 
 
| - | 
- | 
- | 
Pass | 
 
| 1¨ | 
Dble | 
Pass | 
1© | 
 
| Pass | 
2¨ | 
Pass | 
2ª | 
 
| Pass | 
4ª | 
All Pass | 
                   | 
 
 
            Unless the defence messes up, there are simply too many losers 
              to allow 4ª to make. Sure enough, the opening diamond lead established 
              the defensive tricks in that suit before declarer could start on 
              the clubs, and Kotorowicz was one down for –50. 
            Three No Trump was another matter. Araskiewicz led the jack of 
              diamonds and Buras overtook then, when his queen held, led a second 
              diamond to declarer's ace. When Hoffman rattled off the spades, 
              Buras could see that he would be endplyed if he kept his club honours 
              so, as the only hope of breaking the contract, he threw them away 
              with the wish that East would hold at least the jack. It was not 
              to be. All that happened was that Hoffman turned his attention from 
              Spades to clubs, and the last on eof those executed a squeeze against 
              West's red-suit holdings; twelve tricks for +490 and 11 IMPs to 
              Israel. 
            
| 
Board 20. All Vul. Dealer West.
 | 
 
|   | 
ª A K Q 9 7 3 
© 6 
¨ A J 8 4 
§ J 5 | 
 
ª J 
© A Q J 9 7 
¨ K 9 2 
§ 9 7 4 3 | 
  | 
ª 6 5 4 
© 8 5 2 
¨ 10 7 6 3 
§ 10 8 6 | 
|   | 
ª 10 8 2 
© K 10 4 3 
¨ Q 5 
§ A K Q 2 | 
 
 
            
| Closed Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Buras | 
Hoffman | 
Araskiewicz | 
Ofir | 
 
| 1© | 
1ª | 
Pass | 
2© | 
 
| Pass | 
4© | 
Pass | 
4NT | 
 
| Pass | 
5¨ | 
Pass | 
6ª | 
 
| All Pass | 
                   | 
                   | 
                   | 
 
 
            
| Open Room | 
 
| West | 
North | 
East | 
South | 
 
| Reshef | 
Kalita | 
Ginossar | 
Kotorowicz | 
 
| 1© | 
Dble | 
Pass | 
3NT | 
 
| Pass | 
4ª | 
All Pass | 
                   | 
 
 
            Are you an overcaller or a doubler with the North hand? Kalita 
              was a doubler but, when he then removed 3NT to 4ª, Kotorowicz did 
              not like his hand enough to go on, probably becuse the heart holding 
              looked bad. All that was needed for slam was the marked diamond 
              finesse and not all four trumps with East; +680. 
            Hoffman was an overcaller and he splintered at his next turn. That 
              convinced Ofir to take control, wasted ©K or not, and the slam was 
              quickly reached; +1430 and 13 IMPs to Israel. 
            The double whammy on the last two deals helped to make a useful 
              win into a big one, and Israel came out on top by 62-20 IMPs, 24-6 
              VPs. Poland still led, but by only 10 VPs from Hungary, with Israel 
              in third and having the momentum with them. It looked as though 
              we might have an exciting finish to this Championship after all. 
             |