BOLS REVISITED
By Patrick Jourdain (Wales)
One feature of Junior Bridge is that there
is always a new generation of players who may not have heard
the old saws. When the BOLS liqueur company ran a competition
for journalists to provide advice of a general nature (“The
five level belongs to the opponents” is perhaps the best remembered),
my contribution was: “With eight winners and five losers in
Three Notrumps, play off your long suit.”
This deal from Round 3 illustrates the
point
Board 16. Dealer West. E/W Vul. |
|
ª
K 9 7 2
© A Q J
10 6
¨ 5
§ A 10 5 |
ª
A 4
© 9 7 4
¨ A K Q 2
§ K Q 9 4 |
|
ª
Q 8
© K 2
¨ J 9 8 6 4 3
§ J 7 2 |
|
ª
J 10 6 5 3
© 8 5 3
¨ 10 7
§ 8 6 3 |
At several tables, after North had overcalled
in hearts, East reached Three Notrumps. If South led a spade
this must fail, but most led their partner’s suit, setting up
declarer’s eighth trick. On Vugraph the Belgian declarer clearly
did not know my Tip for he crossed to dummy to try to sneak
a club trick by playing low towards the jack. North for Scotland,
Robert Carr, was not hard-pressed to pop up with the ace and
cash his hearts. One off.
If, instead, declarer simply plays out
his diamonds, North cannot avoid giving declarer a chance. North
can happily throw two spades and two clubs, but the pressure
exerted by the last diamond proves unbearable. He must either
throw a good heart, in which case declarer can safely play a
club, or he has to bare the king of spades. Note that cashing
the long suit works even if North had something like ªKQ
with declarer having the jack. All that is needed is that the
defender is hanging on to useful cards in three suits.
Sunamak, declarer for Turkey, knew the
play, cashed his diamonds, and made his game when North for
Sweden, Nystrom, bared his king of spades in the ending. The
Danish declarer in the same contract also knew the Tip and duly
cashed his diamonds. However, full credit goes to the Estonian
North, Lauri Naber, who bared his king of spades, smoothly,
before declarer played the last diamond, on which he threw a
club. East could not believe North, if squeezed, had managed
his discards without signs of distress, and eventually decided
to play for hearts to be 4-4, despite the evidence to the contrary.
He continued with a club. One off.
The main drama came in the match between
Croatia and Italy where both tables were in Three Notrumps doubled
on a heart lead:
West
Medusei
2¨
Pass |
North
Zoric
2ª
Dbl |
East
Mazzadi
3NT
All Pass |
South
Grahek
Pass |
West
Pilipovic
1¨
2ª
3NT |
North
Biondo
1ª
Pass
Dbl |
East
Sasek
2¨
2NT
All Pass |
South
Guariglia
Pass
Pass |
Both Souths dutifully led a heart, with
North putting in the ten. The declarers, Mazzadi and Sasek,
won the heart and rattled off six diamonds. On the last one,
the Croatian North threw a heart, and Mazzadi set up a club
for his game. At the other table, the Italian North, Bernardo
Biondo, bared his spade king, but Tomislav Sasek read the ending
and played a spade to the ace. Well done. 750 was a flat board.
|