Friday, December 9, 2016

Orlando hand


Here is a deal that came up on the first day of the 2016 NABC Swiss Teams in Orlando.

 Dealer East; EW Vul.


                    S K 7
                    H 4 2
                    D Q 10 7 6
                    C K J 5 4 3

                    S A Q 10 6
                    H A 10 5
                    D J 9 5 3
                    C A Q

West       North     East        South
                              2H           Double    
Pass         3C*       Pass         3NT
All pass    

*3C showed values.
Lead H9

It looks like 9 tricks should be attainable unless the opposing distribution is very unfriendly. With a club split or if spades come in for 4 tricks you make your contract.
You duck the first two hearts, on general principles, and win the third. East has KQJxxx and West pitches the diamond A on the third round of hearts! What's going on? Is West really squeezed?
Is LHO 4-2-2-5? You cash your top clubs in hand (ace-queen) and as expected East shows out (pithing a diamond). What now?
Seems like he's got something like
J x x x
9 x
A K
10 9 8 7 x
Declarer, an American pro, took that inference and continued with another diamond.
This was the full deal:
                     K 7
                     4 2
                     Q 10 7 6
                     K J 5 4 3
      9 8 4 2                J 5 3
      9 7                      K Q J 8 5 3
      A 8                     K 4 2
      10 9 8 7 2           6
                     A Q 10 6
                     A 10 5
                     J 9 5 3
                     A Q

I was sitting West (playing with Allan Falk). Maybe declarer should get it right but without my pitch 3NT was making easily.

1 comment:

ulven said...

http://bridgewinners.com/article/view/defense-from-na-swiss/