whereagles, on 2011-March-26, 13:33, said:
Foxx, too many hands in one post. Pls split stuff next time
Lots of interesting hands from that day, and they still got only HALF way through the alphabet. I'm going all the way from A to Z next time. J/K.
Lots of varying opinions here too. A club game with all you guys in it would be a lot of fun, I think.
(1) I was South and shot out 6
♥ here. How could I do less? LHO led the
♠K and dummy put down
♠A52
♥9 ("You have one!")
♦AKQ932
♣K72. I threw a club on the
♠A, drew trump (2-0) then threw the other club on the
♦A-K. Making seven. RHO turned out to have a diamond
void and LHO was really upset at herself for not leading a diamond, even after I explained to her that her partner owed her a Lightner double of 6
♥ which would be automatic looking at the
♣A. Anyway, those young ladies now know about Lightner doubles.
(2) My partner faced this problem, and bid 3
♣. This would run into a pickle, as my RHO bid 3
♠ and my LHO raised to 4
♠. Partner still had yet to show the heart support, and had to do so with 5
♥, where I played with
♠KQ2
♥QJ1075
♦K6
♣765. LHO led the
♣Q and got a club ruff with the singleton
♥8. Aargh. The right answer to the problem was 2
♠, then over their 4
♠, partner would have been able to bid 5
♣, which is unbeatable.
(3) Here, possible calls are 3
♣, 3
♦, 2NT, and 3NT. I raised to 3
♦ and partner played there with
♠KQ2
♥Q
♦KJ9854
♣K65. We should take ten tricks, but he would make five on a discarding error in the endgame. At first glance, it looks like we missed a good 3NT.... but look closer. After the defense ducks the first diamond, how are you getting to the North hand? East has
♣A3 and West has
♥KJ108. I would be surprised if anybody played in 3NT and made it. I think +150 was a good score.
(4) Thought I'd throw an easy one in here. I led the
♦4, and hit partner with
♦Q10 doubleton; their diamonds were 3-3. Down one, and it was the only lead, since they can run three spades, one heart and five clubs.
(5) I was South, and chose to splinter with 4
♥. What happened on this hand is not suitable for posting on a forum read by children. Partner had
♠AQ853
♥9643
♦KQ102
♣ ---. In retrospect, either 2
♣ or even 4NT would have been more prudent to simplify. (No, we did not land in 7
♠.)
(6) This was an important hand, because it was the last one before lunch. Not too many people were going to be here, so I wanted to get this right, but I had little to go on. I led a spade to the
♠K (I had dropped the
♦Q on the second diamond, winning the third with dummy's
♦J), all following. When I led the
♠J from hand, West followed low. I took a trip through a long corridor filled with cats and mice, then called for the
♠A from dummy. RHO dropped the
♠Q! And we got a huge lift heading into the intersession break. Everyone who played LHO for shortness would have gotten home too, since the
♠Q would have popped up on the second round.
(7) Partner was declarer here, and this may have been his best played hand of the entire tourney. He won the
♠A in dummy and ran the
♦10 to East's
♦Q. East continued with the
♠Q, ducked, then another spade to dummy's king, West discarding a club. Partner played a diamond to the
♦A, picking up West's doubleton
♦J, then a heart to dummy's
♥10 and West's
♥J. West switched to the
♣J, ducked, then a second club to East's
♣Q and the
♣A. Now came two more rounds of diamonds, ending in hand, and West was squeezed in the round suits. One trick in each suit was ducked to rectify the count.
Black-suit leads by the defense actually helped us because each defender's long black suit could be cut off by ducking. Heart leads were needed to break up the squeeze, as it turns out.
(8) I was South here, and perhaps I should have cue bid, but I wanted better diamond support. I tried 2
♠, offbeat but with a shot to work. Partner rebid 3
♦, now I bid 3
♥ which LHO doubled. This was passed back around to me, and I ran back to 4
♦, where partner played with
♠87
♥9
♦AQ8743
♣K1072. He can make it, but he got the clubs wrong to go one down (East had
♣QJxx). As it turns out, 5
♣ is making, even with the bad trump break.
(9) We're in the afternoon hands now. I called my eight-card suit trumps, and launched into 5
♦. Partner had
♠AJ1072
♥98
♦Q9
♣8653, and there was no way to take more than ten tricks; down one. This may not have been a bad board, because if 4
♥ is being played their way, the defense of the
♦Q lead and another diamond will let it make. LHO has
♠K84
♥AJ10763
♦2
♣KJ2, and will only go down in 4
♥ if the defense gets a spade ruff, or if he takes a trump finesse into my hand. 3
♥ by North is unbeatable unless my hand gets TWO spade ruffs. This requires North to lead the
♠A or a club, and South to UNDERLEAD the
♦AK after the first spade ruff.
(10) I held this hand, and led the
♥10. Oops. Dummy hit with
♠J8754
♥82
♦9764
♣A10, and declarer had
♠KQ6
♥K4
♦AKJ52
♣Q75. He won the
♥K and drove out the
♠A, giving him eight tricks. A club is the best lead, but any non-heart would have gotten a set. I picked the wrong time to lead away from an ace into power.
(11) Holding this hand, I decided to play partner for more than a minimum for the free bid. In support of hearts, I had a giant squid, so I shot to 4NT and found out about two key cards and the trump queen. Partner played in 6
♥ holding
♠6
♥KQ83
♦AQJ107
♣KJ5. Trumps broke 4-1, but West had the singleton
♥J, so we had twelve running tricks after the club lead. Our handling of this board was worthy of "A winner is you" and "Congraturation!"
(12) On the other hand, this was by far my worst-played hand of the tourney. I chose to pass, and led the
♠A. Dummy hit with
♠87
♥965
♦A8754
♣982, partner discouraged with
♠QJ52
♥832
♦Q632
♣KQ, and I switched to the
♥J. Ow. This was the only hand of the weekend for which I looked at the matchpoint scores. At this point, we already had a sub-10% board for 3
♣ by them making four. At trick three, declarer led his
♦J, covered by the king and ace, and led a club to his ace, the
♠K, a spade ruff, and another club. Partner returned a heart to declarer's
♥A, and on the run of the trumps I hung on to my diamonds, playing declarer for
♦QJx. Dummy's
♥9 scored the last trick.
It turns out that 3
♠ was cold our way. Had we bid it and been allowed to play there, that would have been a very good board.
(13) This was the last hand of the event. After the bidding so far, I knew where I wanted to play, and sprang a quintuple jump in notrump.
LHO led the
♠9 against 6NT and dummy came down with
♠AK32
♥102
♦63
♣KQ1098. The lead gave me a fourth spade trick, which was not a big factor by itself but it took off some of the pressure. I led a club to the
♣K and RHO's
♣A. Back came a diamond, won by my ace, and I had to think about how I would execute a squeeze in case LHO started with
♣Jxxx. I cashed the
♥A in case someone had the singleton
♥J, then went ahead and led another club. LHO popped up with the
♣J!!!!!!!!!! Hand Over. Plus 990, and I got up from the table with a hero's aura.
We would finish in the top 5 when all was said and done. Had it not been for a few toe-stubs, we had the potential to finish as high as second. But I can't really complain. This was the first time I'd ever played bridge outside the state of California. We exceeded our pre-tourney expectations going in. We'll be back.