Thursday, June 10, 2010

Jennbridge: Two from the Sacramento Swiss **

Jenn and I had fun at the Sacramento regional this past week.  We placed in a pair game, then finished in the top 10 in the main event, a two-day Swiss Teams containing most of the good teams in N. California, plus a few pro teams.


The first hand clinched a spot in the finals.  The second got us a nice match win on day two. 


1.  It was Round 6 of 7.  We needed 4 or 5 VP to qualify.  Our opponents were Jill Meyers and Jill Levin, two world champions.  I held, both vulnerable:


♠   AK754
♥   T83

♦    A65
♣   K7



Partner deals and passes, as does RHO.  I opened 1 Spade.  LHO passes, and partner bids 2 Clubs, which we play as reverse Drury, showing a limit raise.  RHO doubled, showing clubs.  I liked my hand, so accepted with 4 Spades.   Everyone passed,  LHO led a low club, and I looked at: 




♠ QT6
♥ KJ
♦ K9742
♣ Q54


♠ AK754
T83
A65
♣ K7


RHO won the ace and returned a club.  My plan was to draw trump and try to duck a diamond into RHO, so I could eventually pitch my heart losers on dummy's diamonds, losing a heart, diamond and club.  So I played the ace of spades and a spade to the queen.  RHO showed out on the second spade, pitching a club.  So my plan wasn't going to work, since I couldn't lose a diamond as that would give me a loser in each suit.  I had to use the club queen to discard my diamond loser, and somehow hold the heart losers to one. 


I played a diamond to the ace and a heart to dummy, planning to finesse the jack, hoping for LHO to have the queen and RHO the ace.  However, LHO hopped up with the ace and, after considerable thought, returned a heart.  I won the king and played the queen of clubs, pitching a diamond.  She ruffed and played her last trump, keeping me from ruffing the last heart in dummy.  Now there were 3 tricks remaining.   I had a spade, the heart ten and a low diamond.  Dummy had the king and two low diamonds.  So I played the last spade and hoped for the best.  Eureka!  LHO discarded the heart queen, so my ten of hearts became good for the fulfilling trick.  It turned out that LHO was squeezed between the red suits.  Her last 3 cards were the heart queen and two diamonds.  She had to protect the diamonds, so she hoped her partner had the heart ten.  Game made, 12 big IMPs won and a spot in the finals assured!


2.  Jenn heard me open a strong 2 Clubs, and looked at:


♠  962
43
♦  T32
♣ KJT87


The hand and club suit aren't good enough for a natural 3 Clubs, so Jenn bid 2 Diamonds, waiting.  I replied 2 Hearts.  Now Jenn had a problem.  She thought the hand was too good for a second negative, but she couldn't bid 3 Clubs, as that would have been an artificial second negative in our methods, denying a king or 2 queens.  So what should she do?  She had to improvise with 2NT, even though this risked wrong-siding the contract if we ended up in no-trump. 


Now let's look at my hand.  I held:


♠  A8
♥  AKJ86
♦  AKQ
♣ AQ2



Not a bad collection!  27 HCP with a 5-card suit.  When I heard Jenn reply 2NT, I really didn't know how strong her hand was.  She could have had as little as the king of clubs and nothing else.  However, since the hand has such great potential, I just decided to take a shot at 6NT.  I figured that if she had a really good hand, say three of the missing kings and queens, she might raise to seven.  So Jenn played it in 6NT.  This proved easy to play, as when she cashed the heart ace, RHO showed out, so she had a marked finesse and was able to claim.  6NT bid and made, and 13 IMPs won.  Jenn's counterpart at the other table treated her hand as a second negative, so they stopped in 3NT. 


Good luck!

1 comment:

Memphis MOJO said...

Congrats on the nice showing.

Your profile says you won the IMP Pairs in 1994. The ACBL data base says 1993. Wikipedia also says 1993 and you can see it here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebhar_IMP_Pairs