Bridge Family Schaltz

Peter Schaltz

For some lucky people, ability at bridge is in the blood. For an example we travel to Denmark. It is a hot bed of talent, where the best junior players almost always go on to achieve even greater success. One such is Peter Schaltz.

Back in 1970, in Dublin, Denmark won the second European Junior Team Championship, and guess who was a member of the winning team? Spot on, it was our man Peter, one of the outstanding players in Europe, with a string of impressive results behind him, including medals at several major Championships, including silver at the Europeans in Lausanne in 1979 and bronze at the Olympiad in Seattle in 1984. The most recent of his many triumphs came earlier this year at the European Mixed Championships in Bellaria, where he was a member of the winning team, along with his wife Dorthe, and Jens & Sabine Auken.

The semi-finals of that event were one-sided affairs, but this deal showed the standard of play required at the highest levels.

 

Bye Team Profile

We are not a wealthy country, competing only when there is an odd number of teams and the organisers wish us to make up the numbers. If you look at the Results Table you will see we have a consistent, rather poor, record, losing every match 12-18. However, that is better than some!

We have some members on the staff. You may have had a ruling from our studious Tournament Director, BY The Book, or our member of the Appeals Committee, BYE Law. Missing, incidentally, is BY the Way.

Now let me introduce our team. Our top player, of course, is BEST BUY. His partner, also a competent player, I shall name later. (Can you guess why?) In our second partnership we have a player, who, for a Junior, bids very little, namely PASS BY. His partner is the only female in the team, the tall blonde who plays cricket, LEG BYE. Our third pair is fairly inexperienced. One player I rest as often as possible, LAY BY. The other, really only a reserve, is STAND BY. We have a local coach from Turkey, ALI BI.

Did you guess the name of BEST BUY s partner who I mention last? It is GOOD BYE.

Signing off: The team n.p.c., BYE BYE.

(aka Patrick Jourdain)

 

Dealer North. All Vul
  ª 8 7 6 4 2
© Q 7 4
¨ 5
§ A K 10 7
ª A
© 9 8
¨ J 9 8 7 6 4 2
§ Q 9 6 4
Bridge deal ª K Q J 5 3
© A J 10 3
¨ A K Q
§ J
  ª 10 9
© K 6 5 2
¨ 10 8 3
§ 8 5 3 2

 

 

West
Peter

1NT
2¨ *
3NT
North
Levy
Pass
Pass
Pass
All Pass
East
Dorthe
1ª
2§ *
3© **
South
Willard
Pass
Pass
Pass

 

Two Clubs was forcing, and the reply denied five or more hearts or a six card minor with two honours. Three Hearts was game forcing.

 

North cashed a top club and switched to a spade. Declarer won, cashed three top diamonds, North discarding a club and a heart, and played a low heart. North won the queen and exited with a spade. Declarer won, cashed the ace of hearts, and played spade, spade, spade to endplay North into giving the ninth trick to the queen of clubs.

 

West
Mouiel
Pass
1NT
3NT
North
Jens
Pass
Pass
All Pass
East
Cronier
1ª
2©
South
Sabine
Pass
Pass

 

North cashed a top club and switched to a spade. Declarer won, cashed three top diamonds, North discarding a club and a heart, and two more rounds of spades, discovering the 5-2 break, before playing a low heart. North won with the queen and exited with a spade. Declarer won, cashed the ace of hearts, and played a spade to endplay North into giving the ninth trick to the queen of clubs.

The armchair analysts can have some fun working out if it is better to play the nine of hearts at trick three, intending to run it if North does not cover.

 

Hot on his parent’s heels is Martin Schaltz, representing the Danish Junior team. Ib Lundby reported the following award winning deal.

 

Lizzi and Jørgen-Elith Schaltz were some of the hot bridge names I read about and learned from, when I was a junior player. Lizzi won the European Ladies Team title several times, and her husband played on our national team as well. For a couple of years my partner was Peter Schaltz, their son, and in 1970 I was his captain when he and his team won the European Junior title in Dublin. Since then Peter has for many years played on our national team with different partners, among them his wife Dorthe and his cousin Knud-Aage Boesgaard.

Dorthe and Peter are still competing in the Danish first division, but their chances to represent Denmark again maybe have decreased a little. No problem at all - the third generation is ready to take over! Meet 14 years old Martin Schaltz in this fascinating hand from a club evening where Martin ended up as declarer.

 

Dealer South. None Vul
  ª Q 8 4
© Q 6
¨ A K 10 7 2
§ Q 10 2
ª J 10 7 3
© K 9 7 4 3 2
¨ 8
§ J 8
Bridge deal ª A 6
© 10
¨ J 9 5 4 3
§ K 9 7 4 3
  ª K 9 5 2
© A J 8 5
¨ Q 6
§ A 6 5

 

West

Pass
North

3NT
East

All Pass
South
1NT

 

West led his fourth best heart, won by dummy's queen, and after a diamond to the queen the next diamond trick told Martin that he had to work for it. So he did!

 

The ¨K took trick 3, and a heart to the 8 end-played West on the 9. He elected to play the ªJ which was taken by the ªK, and a spade went to the 8 and the bare ace. Now it was East's turn to be thrown in! A low club went to the jack and queen, and before Martin cashed the ªQ this was the picture:

 

  ª Q
© -
¨ A K 10 7 2
§ Q 10 2
ª J 10 7 3
© K 9 7 4 3 2
¨ 8
§ J 8
Bridge deal ª -
© -
¨ J 9 5
§ K 9 7
  ª 9 5
© A J
¨ -
§ A 6

 

Look what happens to East when the ªQ is played. If he throws a diamond, declarer will cash the ¨A and continue with a diamond, thereby making his third end-play. Therefore East had to throw a club, but it didn't help him very much. Instead Martin played a club to his ace, discarded a diamond on the ©A and threw East in with the §K. Dummy's A10 in diamonds took the two last tricks. 3NT made with an overtrick.

 

Two end-plays and a throw-in squeeze in the same hand... I guess that we will meet Martin at the international scene very soon. Right you are!

We have spotted several well-known names in the programme, and we invite you to work out (assuming we are right!) whom their (doubtless temporarily!) more famous parents might be!

 

 

 


Page 2 of 5

Top of page return to top of page Previous page Next page to the list of Bulletins To the list of Bulletins
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5