Raise to Two with Three Trumps
Transcription
Raise to Two with Three Trumps
Andrew Kambites Says Raise to Two with Three Trumps ou are playing Acol with fourcard majors. Your partner opens 1m. What should you respond with hand A? Y Hand A m K76 n 32 o A532 p 9643 Hand B m Void n 96 o QJ7654 p K8432 With seven points and a four-card suit, hand A falls well short on the Rule of Fourteen. Seven plus four is eleven, and you want a score of fourteen for a twoover-one response. This leaves two choices: 1NT and 2m. If you go for 1NT, because you like four spades to raise 1m to 2m, think again. Several factors make 2m the most practical bid. 1 As you may know, I like to describe the 1NT response as a ‘dustbin bid’. It has to include hand B because B isn’t good enough for a two-level change of suit. If opener has five spades (and he very often will), he cannot rebid 2m in case you have hand B. A 1NT response on A means that you will regularly miss a 5-3 spade fit. 2 What can partner have for 1m if he has only four spades? You never open a 44-4-1 with 1m, so that leaves 4-4-3-2 and 4-3-3-3 shapes. With these shapes, assuming you play a weak no-trump, he opens 1NT if he has 1214 points. Thus, he can only open 1m without five spades if he is balanced but too strong for 1NT. Even then, he will open 1n with 4-4 in the majors or he may well open a strong 4-card minor rather than a weak 4-card major. In practice, depending on your style, between 75% and 90% of Acol 1m openings will contain five or more spades. If you respond 1NT to 1m with hand A, you are going to miss an awful lot of 5-3 spade fits! 3 Suppose opener has a balanced hand with four spades. What can he rebid if you raise 1m to 2m? i With 15-16 points, opener passes. Game is unlikely opposite your 6-9. Note that he doesn’t say 16 points facing a possible 9 make game and bid on. You don’t look for perfect cards. You cannot allow yourself to keep getting too high just to avoid missing the odd game. How well will 2m play? It will be a 4-3 fit. While this is sub-optimal, you will have extra points to help and partner might well ruff a heart in your short trump hand. You can usually come to eight tricks playing in a 4-3 fit with fair values at the two level. ii With 17-18 points, he bids 2NT over your 2m. There is sometimes confusion about what 2NT shows. In rubber-style Acol, 1m-2p-2NT shows 15-16 points. That is logical because 1m-2p shows at least nine points. 1m-2m shows at most nine points, so 2NT here shows 17-18. iii With 19 points, he rebids 3NT. My advice is this: If partner opens 1m, you should prefer a raise to 2m to a response of 1NT if you have three-card spade support and some side suit shortage. A few players even raise on a flat 3-3-3-4 shape; that is not my advice. It is equally valid to raise 1n to 2n with three-card support, though if you have three hearts and four spades a response of 1m is best. Don’t raise 1m to 3m on three-card support even if you have the values for jumping. I finish with some examples. Page 29 m n o p K76 32 A632 9543 m n o p N W E S West North 2m Pass East 1m 2NT AQ82 A84 K754 A7 South Pass End 2NT shows 17-18 and four spades. West must decide between spades or notrumps and between game and partscore. With three spades, North prefers no-trumps. Being minimum, he passes 2NT rather than raise to 3NT. m n o p KJ64 32 A632 954 m n o p N W E S West North 2m 4m Pass End East 1m 2NT AQ82 A84 K754 A7 South Pass Pass This time West has four spades and a maximum, so jumps to the spade game. You raise to two with three trumps at other times. If partner overcalls – surely showing a five-card suit – it is clear to raise. Opener may also raise: m n o p KJ6 KJ72 A9632 9 If you open 1o and partner responds 1m, a rebid of 2m is much better than 2o. You can ruff in the short hand and be sure of at least a seven-card fit. I Seasonal Walks with Countryman A Walk in Spring T his little piece of England, where the birds are singing, the sun is shining and the air seriously intoxicating – it’s all too easy to fall under its magic spell and dream on, contentedly… ‘Walkies’ A faint whining sound alerted me to the time. Cindy, my Golden Retriever with those gorgeous, soulful, brown eyes, seems to have a built-in clock, which chimes out ‘walkies’ at more or less the appropriate time on a daily basis. So it was that we set forth on this crisp and sunny April morning with no more demanding task in front of us than to decide our route. Spoilt for choice, really, because wherever you looked spring most certainly was bursting out all over. The whole countryside was just enchanting in its beauty and tranquillity. I marvelled at the way, year in, year out, the hedgerows emerged from their slumbers, each little sprig fighting to be more vibrant than its neighbour and yet somehow in the end combining to present a united front of verdant splendour. The two cherry blossom trees in the corner of the meadow have always had special appeal for me at this time of year; I only wish they could last a little longer as their delicate shade of pink is an inspiring sight in the midst of a green surround and blue sky up above. Keeping up with Cindy As we wend our way along the meadow towards the copse at the far end, Cindy is racing from one new exciting smell to another – her enthusiasm for countryside smells seems limitless and if tail wagging is any indication of her present demeanour, well, she must be in seventh heaven! Every now and then, as she races ahead, she looks back to ensure I am keeping up, sometimes returning perhaps to jolly me along. The Magic of the Countryside Just before arriving at a convenient entry to the copse, a cock pheasant rockets into the air. His brilliant plumage gleams in the sun while he complains bitterly at being disturbed. Cindy is not in the least abashed; in fact, I think she is rather proud of herself because she looks towards me for approval, her tail wagging furiously. It is probably a little early for mother hen to be nesting but I am quietly pleased that Cindy disturbed the male bird – just in case. Threading our way through the copse down to the small brook that runs along the perimeter of the wooded area, one is conscious of the liberal sprinkling of primroses. This show of colour, together with the occasional glint of sunshine that battles its way through any available gap in the trees, does much to preserve the magic of the countryside. However, perhaps it is the brook itself, suddenly emerging as something new, exciting and contrasting – and quite unexpected unless you knew it was there – that quickens the pulse. One reads of babbling brooks but this one does not babble; it meanders Page 30 gracefully along with no more than a gentle ripple to announce its own particular part in a truly memorable scene. I notice a pair of moorhens on the opposite bank some way ahead and suspect they may have a nest nearby. If this is the case, they have certainly chosen an idyllic spot and I shall look forward to seeing their offspring in the near future. Last Night’s Duplicate As it is nearly time to start on the homeward journey, I call Cindy, making my intentions clear, and then decide to look more carefully at one of the interesting hands from last night’s duplicate. I had scribbled it down earlier but had not really examined it in detail. Now, having memorised the layout, this seemed a pleasant way to do a spot of analysing – country style! m n o p Dealer South. Game All. m K74 n J732 o A Q J 10 p 74 10 9 8 m J532 N Q94 n Void W E K832 o 9754 S K82 p J 10 9 5 3 m AQ6 n A K 10 8 6 5 o 6 p AQ6 From the Scottish Bridge Union News Spring continued West North East South 1n Pass Pass Pass End 3n 4o 5o Pass Pass Pass 3m 4NT 6n West leads the ten of spades and, looking at the North-South hands in isolation, the slam bidders seem to have hit the jackpot. A favourable trump break is odds on (78%) and, even if they are three-nil, it would only be a problem if West were the culprit. The ruffing finesse in diamonds would easily take care of any club losers, whoever held the king. Highly Suitable Dummy Declarer certainly liked what he saw. He won the first trick with the ace of spades and cashed the ace of hearts to get the bad news. Never mind, there were still plenty of chances. The king of hearts came next, followed by the ace of diamonds. Now declarer eliminated the spades and threw West on lead with the queen of trumps. He switched to a club in the hope that his partner had the queen but declarer was able to claim the contract. Third Hand Play by Douglas Piper B y far the most difficult aspect of bridge is defence; defence is hard and teaching students to defend properly is an almost insurmountable task. In the last month alone there have been over 400 bridge teacher suicides after a defensive lesson, compared to only one after play, and two after bidding lessons. This is without taking into account the huge number of bridge teachers turning to alcoholism after a defensive lesson. (This statistic is impossible to calculate, as many, like me, keep it hidden). Something simple to start with then: third hand play. The Rule for playing third hand, is, if dummy has low cards, third hand plays high, but lower/lowest of equals. Basically the opposite of what you do when you lead (when you always play the top of sequences). From this simple rule, we can often decide whether or not we have made a good lead. m n o p The Wrong Exit Card Although East could have helped by discarding the jack of clubs, West could, and should, have exited with a small diamond. That would have given declarer a cheap trick catering for the disposal of the six of clubs, but the queen of clubs would still be a loser. Should West have been able to work this out? Well, since declarer would have finessed if he held more than one diamond and the position was hopeless if he held the last spade, West could count decalrer’s shape. He was marked with six hearts, three spades and one diamond; this left him with three clubs thus one discard would not suffice. ‘I’m afraid West was at fault for failing to count,’ I explained to Cindy as she gave me a quizzical look. Maybe she did not fully understand but she wagged her tail encouragingly. I think she knows more than she lets on. I m n o p 4 A Q 10 7 5 2 QJ2 KQ2 Q9862 N 93 W E S K 10 8 6 64 Contract 3NT. Lead m6. South 2o 3NT West North 1n Pass End 2n East Pass Pass We lead the six of spades to the four, ten and ace. From the above, we can work out that partner has the mJ-10, (declarer would have won with a lower card if he could have), and that declarer has the king (partner would have played it at trick 1 if he had it). Declarer crosses to the club king and Page 31 runs the queen of diamonds, finessing. We win the diamond king and continue with a low spade knowing we are setting up our suit. As usual, a harder, yet familiar, looking example. m n o p m n o p 4 A Q 10 7 5 2 QJ2 KQ2 Q9862 N 93 W E S K 10 8 6 64 Contract 3NT. Lead m6. After the same auction, again, we lead the six of spades to the four, jack and ace. Declarer crosses to the king of clubs and leads the queen of diamonds. We win the king of diamonds, and consider what we know from the opening lead and play to trick 2. Declarer has the king-ten of spades, (partner would have played either of these cards if he had them at trick 1 remember). So, playing a spade would be a disaster. A club is not going to get us anywhere as declarer obviously has the ace of clubs (partner would have won and returned a spade if he had it), so we switch to the nine of hearts. Partner is likely to win this, (almost certainly he has the king-jack of hearts as, with either of these cards, declarer would have played on hearts) and shoot back a spade. Declarer, unless he has a fourth club trick, is likely to go down on this hand despite all his/her points. Play from Equals The Rule for playing third hand is, if dummy has low cards, third hand plays high, but lower/lowest of equals. Work out what partner, and therefore declarer, has, and apply the I information accordingly. DAVID STEVENSON answers questions on Bridge Laws Rules for Opening an Acol Strong Two Q Would you please qualify the r uling for opening an Acol Strong Two Bid? We were taught 8-9 playing tr icks – points ir relevant. The following hand, recently played in our duplicate club, was opened (and announced) as a strong 2n: m n o p A QJ8765432 Void A75 Is this cor rect? I would appreciate your views. Mike Gurney, Hempstead, Norfolk A This is an ongoing problem because, as you say, some people have learnt that an Acol Two Bid shows (nothing more than) 8+ playing tricks. This is not the way to play an Acol Two – see an article by Bernard Magee on the subject a few issues ago in BRIDGE – because the idea of an Acol Two is to show a strong hand. The originators of the bid intended the Acol Two Bid for hands sufficiently strong all round, that game could be makeable even if partner did not have the necessary 6 points to reply to a one bid. Without a forcing bid, you are afraid that the bidding will continue pass-pass-pass. 8+ playing tricks is just an approximate standard for such hands. Nowadays, a common phrase for describing an Acol Two Bid is a ‘hand of power and quality’. What is happening is that players are opening a variety of hands, strong or not, and calling their bid an Acol Two or a Benjamin 2p, so long as it has 8+ playing tricks. This is not good bridge, because partner knows neither when to go to slam, nor what to do over intervention. For pure game bidding, it works, but so would – for example – opening 1n on the above hand, as I would do. 2n, if described as an Acol Two, has the big advantage of keeping the opponents out: they think it shows a strong hand, and thus they do not bid and often miss things as a result. Thus, the main advantage is an unfair one. The EBU has tried to change the regulations to clarify the minimum for a strong hand. Currently the rules are – A strong hand is: a) subject to proper disclosure, a hand that contains at least the normal high-card strength associated with a one-level opening and at least eight clear-cut tricks, or b) any hand meeting the Rule of 25, or c) any hand of at least 16 HCPs. The Rule of 25 means you add the points to the number of cards in the two longest suits; if it is 25 or more, it qualifies as strong. The example above has 11 points, add 9 and 3 makes 23, so it is not Rule of 25, nor does it have 16 HCPs. Does it have the normal minimum highcard strength for a one-level opening? Well, 11 HCPs looks like the minimum. How many clear-cut tricks does it have? I suppose a 9-card suit with the queenjack but not the ten must be six, so yes, it has eight – just. So while borderline, this hand just qualifies as strong, subject to proper disclosure. So, if the pair describe it, in answer to a question and on the convention card, Page 32 as ‘8+ playing tricks, may be weakish in high cards’, this seems OK. Even so, they must not describe it as an Acol Two. This is not a hand of power and quality! Nor is the bidding after 1n likely to continue pass-pass-pass. To complicate matters somewhat, natural bids, like 2n, do not need to be strong. You can also play them as Intermediate to Strong. If this pair would normally open 2n on a hand like this, they would help matters by so describing their bids. ponm Q Can you please tell me the cor rect (or incor rect!) way to shuffle car ds? Some seem to mix them forever, while some split the pack, place the two halves on their sides and then flick then together. Joy Anderton, Knutsford, Cheshire A Splitting the pack, then flicking them together, as you describe it, is generally called a ‘riffle shuffle’. This method is far preferable to the traditional shuffle, called an ‘overhand’ shuffle. Four or five riffle shuffles creates a thoroughly shuffled pack, but the overhand shuffle is so poor that it really takes something over five minutes shuffling to get a thoroughly shuffled pack. When playing duplicate bridge, some clubs have suggested that players should shuffle their hands on the last round before putting them away. This improves the shuffle. When the new Law book comes in later this year, it will require players to shuffle their cards before putting them away in the board. David Stevenson on Bridge Laws continued Q I have a lady opponent who insists that, after cutting for par tner s, on the fir st deal only, the left hand opponent reaches across the dealer to put the deck on the dealer ’s r ight side, for cutting. This, she claims, accor ds with the teachings of an author called Lederer. On all other occasions, she would observe the nor mal pr actice that the dealer picks up the car ds on his left and presents them to his r ight-hand opponent to cut. I have not read Mr s Lederer ’s book, but I find it difficult to believe that she advocates something contr ar y to my exper ience, and impolite to boot. Your comments/r uling would be welcome. Geoffrey Walker, Chepstow, Gwent A The Laws of bridge say that dealer offers the pack to RHO for the cut. They make no distinction between the first deal of the rubber and subsequent deals. I agree that the suggested method is impolite – and Rhoda Lederer would definitely not have advocated anything so rude. Furthermore, the 1993 Laws apply – and Rhoda Lederer wrote before then – so whatever she wrote on the Laws would not be current anyway. ponm Q Yester day at our club, my LHO led a hear t and his par tner inadver tently pulled out a diamond. He immediately rectified this by playing a hear t and placing the diamond aside as an exposed car d. Dur ing the play, my RHO came on lead. Should he, at this point, play the exposed car d? If dur ing the play he had not gained the lead, when should he play the exposed car d? I could not find the answer s in Duplicate Br idge Rules Simplified. Kay Hammond, by email David Stevenson answers all queries based on the facts supplied by the letter writer. Neither Mr Bridge nor David Stevenson has any way of knowing whether those facts are correct or complete. A Unless this was rubber bridge, someone should have summoned the Director. He would have explained everything, and ought to have stayed at the table until the penalty card was played. The card played in error and replaced is a major penalty card, and its holder must play it at the first legal opportunity. So, if RHO comes on lead, it is a legal opportunity to play it, and he must do so. This is at the bottom of page 22 of the Yellow book 1998. The only exception is that declarer has additional options if the partner of the player with the penalty card gets on lead. At such time, if he wishes, he may require the lead of the suit of the penalty card: alternatively, he may forbid the lead of the suit of the penalty card. In either case, the player with the penalty card picks it up and need not play it until the player wishes. ponm Q I read with interest your reply to Bill Lloyd of Har wood on ‘when is a car d considered played?’ I once read an ar ticle about this but unfor tunately cannot remember in which book! It stated that if a player pulled out the wrong car d by mistake, but quickly realised this, they could change it ‘in reasonable time’ – whatever ‘reasonable time’ may mean. You say that if you place a car d on the table then you cannot change it even though you do so immediately. I under stand that you can change the car d if you have not let go of it. This incident seems to happen from time to time. J.A. Robertson, Fife, Scotland A Once you play a card, you may not change it. So it is a question of defining when a card counts as played. For defenders this is when it is in a position where partner could see it if he was looking. For declarer this is when it is stationary on or near the table, or in a position where obviously played. Once you put a card on the table, you may not change it. However, if declarer Page 33 took it down to the table and immediately brought back, he could change it. The term ‘reasonable time’ does not appear in the Laws. ponm Q Last night at the br idge club I was Nor th with 16 points. The opener was West on my r ight and she opened 3o. We play the Acol pre-empt where three of anything as an opener means fewer than 10 points with seven car ds in the suit. As I had no long suit and not much in diamonds, I passed. When we came to score, ever yone else was in a spade game (Nor th/ South) and West commented that she had 12 points. We challenged this and East /West said that they were playing a nor mal convention whereby a three-level opening means up to 11 points. As she had only one extr a, that was acceptable. She added that we should have asked but, as ever yone plays it as fewer than 10, we did not. Later we spoke to the director s. One said that they were quite entitled to bid and the other said they should have aler ted it! What do you think? Bridie Cushion, Devon A Players can judge what hands are suitable for natural bids in any way they please: furthermore, they do not have to follow their rules if their partners are not aware. It is perfectly normal for one pair to play pre-empts as fewer than ten points and another pair to play them as fewer then twelve points, and it is not alertable. Furthermore, if they want to make the bid one point heavy, this does not affect it. You suffered no damage: even if you had known that 3o could be up to twelve points, you would be less likely to bid rather than more likely. People bid pre-empts to get good scores by cramping the auction for their opponents: this time it has worked. C’est la vie! David Stevenson is on the Laws and Ethics Committee of both the EBU and WBU. He is also an EBU panel Tournament Director. David Stevenson on Bridge Laws continued Q I act as a voluntar y br idge tutor and one of my students recently visited another club. I am not quite sure what happened but an exper ienced player apparently repr imanded my student. This player told my student that, when playing with blue and red packs of car ds, they should use the red car ds for the fir st hand, blue for the second, red for the thir d etc. I get the impression that my student dealt blue car ds for the fir st deal in r ubber br idge. I would be gr ateful if you could clar ify whether, when playing with blue and red car ds, only red car ds should be used for the fir st hand in r ubber, Chicago and duplicate. I per sonally would have thought it really does not matter. If there is to be a standar d, it makes more sense to use blue car ds fir st because ‘B’ for blue comes before ‘R’ for red in the alphabet (akin to the suit or der where ‘C’ for clubs comes before ‘D’ for diamonds comes before ‘H’ for hear ts comes before ‘S’ for spades). W V McCarthy, Mickle Trafford, Cheshire A In rubber bridge, the player who won the cut and deals for the first hand chooses which pack he or she would like to deal with, red or blue. This is the Law. The opponents shuffle and cut the chosen pack in the normal way. In duplicate, it is simply a matter for the club. So, at duplicate, the other club can have such a practice as you describe, but there is no general rule. Having alternating coloured cards in a set of duplicate boards can help because occasionally a player will attempt to play with cards from the wrong board. If the cards have contrasting backs, someone is more likely to notice quickly. I do not like a reprimand to someone playing apparently for the first time, but I suppose it is a question as to how one words it. I Playing Cards in Cairo reviewed by Elena Jeronimidis Subtitled ‘Mint Tea, Tarneeb and Tales of the City’, this new book by Hugh Miles is a semi-autobiographical novel about a British free-lance journalist who falls in love with, and ultimately marries, a beautiful Egyptian doctor, Roda. Because of the constraints on women’s freedom in an Islamic country, for a long time the protagonists can only meet in Roda’s flat, under the chaperonage of her sisters and girlfriends. The ostensible reason for their meetings are endless games of ‘tarneeb’, a card game played in Egypt, very similar to bridge. To enjoy the book, however, you don’t need to be able to play tarneeb, nor bridge for that matter: the card game is just a narrative device which enables the narrator to relate his gradual understanding of the Egyptian people and their way of life. BRIDGE readers will know that card games are wonderful for bringing people together and providing a platform for friendship; Miles’s novel makes this point very well. At first, the familiarity engendered by the game enables the narrator to learn about the lives of the Egyptian characters taking part in the games. They are educated women who cannot enjoy the fruits of their education because they belong to a society where ‘women are essentially viewed as either married, virgins or prostitutes.’ Nadia, a doctor, has to cope with an abusive husband. Yosra, after studying marketing at college, is stuck in a badly-paid job selling medical insurance, and resorts to drugs to escape the misery of her home life where her brother, a policeman, has life-and-death rights over her. Reem, an accomplished linguist, resorts to plastic surgery to stand a chance in a marriage market ruled by men’s whims, and must face the consequences when the surgery goes wrong. As these personal dramas unfold, the narrator sets them against the background of Cairo’s recent history. A grandiose picture emerges of a town where a series of corrupt governments has heaped layers of confusion upon its inhabitants, so that individual behaviour, as well as society’s fabric, has nothing to do with the law. The only frame of reference is ‘a conservative interpretation of Islam’ that drastically, and tragically, limits everyone’s freedom. Hugh Miles is a free-lance journalist well acquainted with the Arab world. Born in Saudi Arabia, he was educated in Libya and at Eton before reading Arabic at Oxford and in the Yemen. His previous book, the prize-winning Al-Jazeera, also dealt with many of the issues at the centre of Playing Cards in Cairo but this new book, with its romantic theme, somehow throws them into sharper relief. If you enjoy books about different cultures and societies, Playing Cards in Cairo will fascinate you. I could not put it down until I reached I the end. Published by Abacus at £12.99 and available post free from , Ryden Gr ange, Knaphill GU21 2TH 01483 489961 Page 34 DEFENCE QUIZ AT THE BEACH HOTEL Worthing, West Sussex, BN11 3QJ Duplicate Weekends 2008 £209 per person full-board with Bernard Magee by Julian Pottage (Answers on page 57) 6-8 June 17-19 October Y ou are West in the defensive positions below. It is your turn to play. m n o p 1. m n o p 74 J852 J84 AK53 KJ82 A A Q 10 5 3 J 10 6 m n o p N W m n o p 3. E S 74 86 10 8 7 5 3 AK73 5-7 December KQ52 K Q 10 5 AQ J 10 6 Doubles Better Defence Game Tries o Full-board Friday to Sunday o All rooms with en-suite facilities o No single supplement o Venue non-smoking o Tuition with Supervised Play, bidding quiz and two seminars N W E _ _ _ _ _ _ _ BOOKING FORM _ _ _ _ _ _ _ S Please book me for ..... places, West North East South Pass Pass 1o Pass 1m Pass 3m Pass 4m End You lead the pA. Partner follows with the p9 and South with the p2. How do you continue? West North East South Pass 1n Pass 1m Pass 3m Pass 4m End Single ..... Double ..... Twin ..... Sea View ..... at the Beach Hotel weekend(s) of ............................................................................................ You lead the pA. Partner follows with the p2 and South with the p4. How do you continue? Mr/Mrs/Miss ..................................................................... Address............................................................................... ............................................................................................ m n o p 2. m n o p 74 10 8 5 3 86 AK753 A982 A KQJ53 J 10 6 N W E S West North East South Pass Pass 1o Pass 1m Pass 3m Pass 4m End You lead the pA. Partner discards the n2 and South follows with the p2. How do you continue? m n o p 4. m n o p 74 K 10 8 7 86 AK732 Postcode ............................................................................ AKQ2 Q6 KQJ53 10 9 ...................................................................................... Special requirements (these cannot be guaranteed, but we will do our best to oblige) N W E S .......................................................................................... Please send a non-returnable deposit of £50 per person per place by cheque, payable to Mr Bridge. An invoice will be sent with your booking confirmation. On receipt of your final payment, 28 days before the event, a programme and full details will be sent together with a map. Cancellations are not refundable. Should you require insurance, you should contact your own insurance broker. West North East South Pass Pass 1o Pass 1m Dbl 4m End You lead the pA. Partner plays the pQ and South the p4. What do you make of the first trick and how do you continue? , Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH 01483 489961 Fax 01483 797302 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.holidaybridge.com Page 35 AT BARONY CASTLE Eddleston by Peebles, Peebleshire, Scotland, EH45 8QWJ Duplicate Weekends 2008 £209 per person full-board DECLARER PLAY QUIZ 24-26 October by Dave Huggett Doubles with Derek Monk (Answers on page 55) 7-9 November Y ou are South as declarer, playing teams or rubber bridge. In each case, what is your play strategy?. Signals & Discards with Chris Barrable o Full-board Friday to Sunday o All rooms with en-suite facilities o No single supplement o Venue non-smoking o Use of swimming pool and fitness suite o Bidding quiz and two seminars 1. 3. m n o p _ _ _ _ _ _ _ BOOKING FORM _ _ _ _ _ _ _ m n o p QJ9 63 54 K Q 10 7 5 3 72 843 AKQ752 84 N W N E W S Please book me for ..... places, m n o p Single ..... Double ..... Twin ..... at the Barony Castle weekend(s) of E S m n o p A83 AK87 AK62 J4 A J 10 KQ2 96 AK752 ............................................................................................ Mr/Mrs/Miss ..................................................................... Address............................................................................... You are in 3NT and West leads the m6. How do you plan the play? You are in 3NT. West leads the m4 and East plays the mQ. How do you plan the play? 2. 4. ............................................................................................ Postcode ............................................................................ ...................................................................................... m n o p Special requirements (these cannot be guaranteed, but we will do our best to oblige) AQ73 76 AKQ43 82 .......................................................................................... m n o p A73 82 65 A Q 10 9 8 2 N W Please send a non-returnable deposit of £50 per person per place by cheque, payable to Mr Bridge. An invoice will be sent with your booking confirmation. On receipt of your final payment, 28 days before the event, a programme and full details will be sent together with a map. Cancellations are not refundable. Should you require insurance, you should contact your own insurance broker. N E W S m n o p , Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH 01483 489961 Fax 01483 797302 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.holidaybridge.com Page 36 Void AK92 10 8 6 5 AKQJ3 You are in 7NT and West leads the mJ. How do you plan the play? E S m n o p K84 A9743 AK72 K You are in 3NT and West leads the oQ. How do you plan the play? Freddie North Says KISS ome years ago, while aboard P & O’s famous cruise liner Canberra, I was due to partner a passenger with whom I had never played before. On asking what conventions she would like to play, I received the surprise response, ‘KISS’. Not having come across this term before – in a bridge sense – I felt a bit apprehensive. Anyway, waiting for no longer than needed for dramatic effect, my partner explained ‘Keep it simple, stupid’. Now all was clear and, in fact, I was in total agreement, even if the flamboyant label seemed a shade out of place. I am sure you must have noticed how unfamiliar partnerships often trip up when one member or the other fails to react correctly to a conventional bid or signal. Perhaps one of them didn’t really want to play the convention in the first place but agreed to do so out of politeness – or they simply took the line of least resistance, hoping it wouldn’t crop up. Over fifty years ago, before the advent of transfers as we know them today, Texas transfers started to become popular. The idea was that over a 1NT opening, responder could bid 4o or 4n to ask opener to convert to the suit above. It was easy enough to remember to bid 4n over 4o but equally easy to forget to convert 4n to 4m. After some lapses Terence Reese and Boris Schapiro, the number one British pair, agreed a fining system in the hope that this would jog the memory. Maybe it did – but, of course, it requires many advantageous hands to compensate for one calamity, fine or no fine. KISS applies just the same today. It is better to play something imperfect that you can remember than something theoretically superior that you – sorry, your partner – is prone to forget. I recall a very recent deal that illustrates only too clearly how KISS would have saved the day. S m n o p Dealer East Love All. Pairs. m QJ62 n KJ83 o Q76 p 52 K 10 8 m 95 N Q 10 6 5 n 42 W E KJ52 o A93 S 73 p K Q 10 9 8 6 m A743 n A97 o 10 8 4 p AJ4 West North Pass 2n Pass Double East Pass 2p End South 1NT Pass As you can imagine, 2n doubled was a disaster for East-West. A relentless defence saw the contract go four down. So, what went wrong? East-West were playing that 2p normally showed both majors. There was a proviso in place; a passed hand could use double for the majors, leaving 2p free as a natural overcall. West simply forgot! You can guess what went wrong on the next deal, again a case of no KISS… m n o p Dealer South. Love All. m Q53 n AK98 o 63 p 7632 10 m 72 J 10 6 n Q542 N W E Q9872 o K J 10 5 S AK94 p Q J 10 m AKJ9864 n 73 o A4 p 85 Page 37 The bidding was over quickly even though it might appear bizarre. South opened 4o and all passed! North had forgotten that the partnership were playing ‘Namyats’, whereby 4p and 4o show ‘good’ pre-empts in hearts and spades respectively (4n and 4m openings are weaker). The concept is sound – pity about the result! It never ceases to amaze me how players get themselves mixed up with their signals. What usually happens is that one member of the partnership foists their ideas (or a newly learnt toy) on a reluctant partner. What is wrong with a simple form of high encourages, low discourages and suit preference when – and only when – applicable? m n o p m n o p Q J 10 8 AQ J AKJ975 9752 4 N A K Q 10 8 4 W E S 10 4 m AK n K 10 9 8 6 o 72 p Q3 m n o p 643 J72 9653 862 53 A simple sequence put South in 6n. West led the ace of diamonds. East, desperate for a continuation to defeat the contract (dummy’s forced high ruff would promote the jack of hearts), played the nine. Alas, West took this as a suit-preference signal and shifted to a spade. KISS, where are you? Finally, I must tell you of the time a famous international pair bid to a grand slam missing the ace of trumps. Boris Schapiro, ever the jester, announced, ‘The ace of trumps was on the wrong side. It could happen to anyone!’ I Mike Wenble Says Lead Towards Strength f you need one trick from Layout A below, what is your best line? I Layout A QJ6 Layout B A J 10 N W N E W S The theme should be clear: to make the most tricks in a suit, you usually lead from small cards towards honours, rather than playing off top cards. With this in mind, here are a couple of layouts for you as a test. The answers are at the foot of the article. E S 532 Layout D KJ75 532 Layout E AQ64 N N Correct with Layout A is to lead low from South, and if West follows low, play the queen (or jack). If this loses to the ace or king, you later lead towards the remaining honour. You succeed if the ace and king are split or West has both. If you start (wrongly) with the lead of the queen, the defenders can thwart you any time the missing honours are split. Layout B is similar, except your target is two tricks. Correct is small to the ten, and if that loses, small to the jack. This also succeeds about 75% of the time, failing only when East holds the king and queen. If you start by cashing the ace, you are very likely to fail. Playing towards strength might mean you play a high-spot card from the other hand. Consider the following: Layout C W N E S 532 This is the first suit Victor Mollo and Nico Gardener discuss in their classic Card Play Technique. Correct is small from hand, inserting the nine if West plays low. You succeed if West holds the K-10 or Q-10. If you play small to the jack, you succeed only when West holds the K-Q – half as likely. E S Q42 J753 1 How do you play D for three tricks? 2 How do you play E for four tricks? Sometimes your high cards are split between the two hands, and it may not appear to matter how you play the suit. With K-5-4 facing Q-6-2, you expect to make only one trick unless someone happens to hold a doubleton ace. Still, appearances can be deceptive. Let us see this in the context of a full deal. AJ9 W W E S m n o p m n o p K J 10 3 2 Void Q J 10 6 2 A97 m n o p 74 AK93 AK95 Q62 N W E S m n o p 985 87 8743 J 10 8 3 AQ6 Q J 10 6 5 4 2 Void K54 West opened 1m, North doubled, and South finished up in 6n. West led the queen of diamonds. How do you think the play went? Page 40 Declarer played low from dummy and ruffed in hand! He drew two rounds of trumps and then led a club towards the queen. West ducked, so the queen won. Declarer then threw the two clubs he had left in his hand on the diamonds, losing just a spade trick. Had West gone in with the ace of clubs, the slam would still make. The K-Q of clubs would be high and declarer throws two spades on the A-K of diamonds. The point here is that declarer can place West with the ace of clubs from the bidding. Hence, the king of clubs is not real ‘strength’ – its main value is in promoting dummy’s queen. To lead towards the club king (or indeed, to lead towards the spade queen for a futile finesse) will lead to defeat. Now the answers to my questions: Layout D KJ75 Layout E AQ64 N W N E S Q42 W E S J753 1 Lead low towards the king-jack and, if West plays low, put up an honour (say the king). If this holds, playing back towards the queen will give you three tricks only if the suit breaks 3-3, and not otherwise. If the king wins, correct is to return to the South hand and play small towards the jack. This wins if the suit splits 3-3 or West holds the doubleton ace. 2 You can only win four tricks if West has king doubleton, so this is what you play for. Once again, correct is to play a small card towards the stronger hand – in this case, the ace-queen. Note that, if you start by leading the jack, West will cover and you must lose a trick. I Online Bridge at Bridgebase.com by Lawrence Cohen P laying bridge online – playing on the internet as opposed to ‘face to face’ – is increasingly popular these days. Readers may be familiar with Bridge Club Live (www.bridgeclublive.com) which is affiliated to the EBU. Some of these sites (such as Bridge Club Live) charge an annual subscription. Some are free to join and play. The quality of the software needed to play and of what you actually see on screen varies enormously. page of the website. There you will see a link to download the software. Click on this link and just follow the instructions – I promise you, in less than five minutes, you will be able to play bridge to your heart’s content! Once you run the software, you will see the opening screen. There is a very good ‘help’ part of the site, which is easy to follow. One can come and go as one pleases. There is no need to stay for any particular time. You can play one Absolutely Free! However, the very best free-to-join and play bridge website in the world is undoubtedly Bridge Base Online (www.bridgebase.com) This is a site created many years ago by Fred Gitelman – a world-class player formerly of Canada but now resident in Las Vegas. The site has over 100,000 members worldwide with anything up to 12,000 playing at any one time. Do not let this frighten you off, however! I want to tell you about a very small part of the site that will be of great interest to all Acol players who would like to try playing online. How to Start Before I do that, I should tell you a little more about how to start playing bridge online at www.bridgebase.com. This is brilliantly simple and you do not need to know much about computers to do it. All you have to do is go to the home hand or 40 hands; it does not matter. The site is open 24/7 and there are always people to play with. Bridge Playing Rooms There are various bridge-playing ‘rooms’ on the site for all levels of players and all sorts of systems. Amongst these ‘rooms’ are some ‘clubs’ that anyone can go to and play. There is no need to ‘join’ these clubs and there is absolutely no charge at all. When I started playing, there was no club devoted specifically to Acol Page 41 players. This meant that I found it difficult to find partners. So, I decided to open a club of my own on Bridge Base Online. I have no premises, there is no charge and anyone can play there! The Acol Players’ Bridge Club The club I opened is ‘The Acol Players’ Bridge Club’. I am the ‘manager’ of the club. www.acolatbbo.org.uk is it’s website address. Over the years, the club has grown and grown. From a starting point of 1 or 2 tables, we now have up to 20 tables a night, with predominantly UK based players. The unique point of the club is that you can be sure of finding a table of like-minded Acol players! This is the only free Acol club on the internet. We have weekly lessons and guided play sessions for all levels of players – from beginners to experts – as well as teams events and tournaments. You can play any sort of scoring system from duplicate to matchpoints and rubber bridge too. To get to the club from the opening screen, click on ‘click to play and watch bridge’, then ‘private and public clubs’, then click on ‘all public clubs’ and then, right at the top of the list is the ‘Acol Players’ Bridge Club’. Click on that link and join a table or even start one of your own! I look forward to seeing you at the Club! You can look forward to many I hours of fast and friendly bridge! Bridge H Cruises and Looking for a holiday, short break or a cruise? Why not choose one from our exte APRIL 2008 4– 6 Horsley Park APRIL cont MAY cont 18 – 20 Staverton Park 16 – 18 Milton Hill House 18 – 20 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate 16 – 18 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate 25 – 27 Theobalds Park The Olde Barn, Marston 4– 4– 25 – 27 Staverton Park Improvers 18 – 20 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate 26 –10/5 Caribbean & Atlantic Isles 25 – 27 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate Marsham Court, Bournemouth 23 – 26 Staverton Park Bank Holiday (3 nights) 11 – 13 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate 25 – 7/8 Arctic Circle & Eclipse AUGUST 2008 7 – 14 Fjords & Fairytales 24 – 31 Norwegian Fjords 11 – 13 Theobalds Park 11 – 13 Wychwood Park MV Discovery MAY 2008 2– 5 Staverton Park Bank Holiday (3 nights) 9 – 11 Harben House 31 –11/6 Fjords, Faroes, Fire & Ice I JUNE 2008 6– 8 The Beach Hotel 6– 8 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate 9 – 11 Milton Hill House 11 – 21 Midnight Sun 9 – 11 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate 13 – 15 Harben House 9 – 11 The Olde Barn Rubber Bridge Latimer House, Chesham 11 – 13 Harben House 14 – 25 Fjords, Faroes, Fire & Ice II 6 The Beach Hotel Rubber Bridge 14 – 27 Amazon and the Caribbean 4 – 14 Fjords & Scottish Islands 25 – 27 The Olde Barn Gentle Duplicate 6 Latimer House Improvers 13 – 15 Marsham Court Gentle Duplicate 16 – 18 The Olde Barn JULY 2008 10 – 24 Northern Capitals Staverton Park, Daventry 7 – 24 Grand Scandinavia 8 – 10 Harben House 21 – 4/7 Baltic Treasures 14 – 24 Baltic Capitals 27 – 29 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate 15 – 17 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate Holidays, d Weekends ensive list. Cruises are in blue, overseas holidays in green and UK breaks in black. AUGUST cont 22 – 25 Staverton Park Bank Holiday (3 nights) SEPTEMBER cont OCTOBER cont 12 – 14 Milton Hill House 10 – 12 Staverton Park Improvers 12 – 14 Staverton Park 19 – 21 Latimer House 19 – 21 Milton Hill House 20 –2/10 Adriatic and Aegean Treasures 26 – 28 Milton Hill House 13 – 24 Black Sea Discovery II 17 – 19 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate NOVEMBER 2008 4 – 16 North African Treasures 7– 9 Barony Castle 7– 9 Harben House Gentle Duplicate 17 – 19 The Beach Hotel 17 – 19 Theobalds Park 24 – 26 The Olde Barn 24 – 26 Barony Castle Port El Kantaoui, Tunisia 24 – 26 Harben House Gentle Duplicate 22 – 24 Theobalds Park or 25 Rubber / Chicago 24 – 26 Wychwood Park 24 – 4/9 Baltic Explorer 24 –4/11 Adriatic and Aegean Odyssey 29 – 31 Staverton Park Barony Castle, Nr Peebles 26 – 28 Marsham Court 26 – 28 Staverton Park 31 –2/11 Milton Hill House Improvers 26 – 28 The Beach Hotel Rubber / Chicago 31 –2/11 Staverton Park 26 – 28 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate Milton Hill House, Oxon 9 Milton Hill House 7– 9 The Olde Barn Improvers 14 – 16 Staverton Park 14 – 16 Theobalds Park 16 –7/12 Voyage to South America 21 – 23 Latimer House 3 Marsham Court 4 – 11 Riviera Cruise 2 – 13 Black Sea Discovery I 5– 7 Wychwood Park 3– 5 Harben House 5– 7 Theobalds Park 3– 5 Theobalds Park 11 – 20 Italian Odyssey 7– OCTOBER 2008 1– SEPTEMBER 2008 31 –2/11 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate Theobalds Park, Cheshunt 10 – 12 Milton Hill House 21 – 23 Staverton Park Gentle Duplicate 28 – 30 Milton Hill House 28 – 30 Theobalds Park Gentle Duplicate The Beach Hotel, Worthing 28 – 30 The Olde Barn PROGRAMME This is the format for all duplicate weekends and rarely varies. AT THE OLDE BARN Toll Bar Road, Marston, Lincolnshire, NG32 2HT FRIDAY o Full-board Friday to Sunday o All rooms with en-suite facilities o No single supplement o Venue non-smoking o Use of swimming pool and fitness suite o Bidding quiz & two seminars (on duplicate weekends only) 1500 AT THE OLDE BARN Welcome Desk open Afternoon Tea 1745 to 1830 Welcome drinks reception _ _ _ _ _ _ _ BOOKING FORM _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Please book me for ..... places, 1830 to 2000 DINNER 2015 BRIDGE SESSION 1 DUPLICATE PAIRS Single ..... Double ..... Twin ..... for the Olde Barn weekend(s) of ....................................... SATURDAY ............................................................................................ 0800 to 0930 BREAKFAST Mr/Mrs/Miss ..................................................................... 1000 to 1230 SEMINAR & SUPERVISED PLAY of SET HANDS 1 (tea & coffee at 1100) Address............................................................................... ............................................................................................ 1230 to 1330 COLD BUFFET LUNCH Postcode .................................. .................................... Special requirements (these cannot be guaranteed, but we will do our best to oblige) 1400 to 1645 BRIDGE SESSION 2 TEAMS of FOUR ........................................................................................... Please give the name(s) of all those covered by this booking ........................................................................................... Please send a non-returnable deposit of £50 per person per place by cheque, payable to Mr Bridge. An invoice will be sent with your booking confirmation. On receipt of your final payment, 28 days before the event, a programme and full details will be sent together with a map. Cancellations are not refundable. Should you require insurance, you should contact your own insurance broker. SUNDAY 28-30 Nov (£199) 1400 to 1645 BRIDGE SESSION 4 DUPLICATE PAIRS Page 44 Further into the Auction Ray Hutchinson Improvers* Take-out Doubles Ray Hutchinson 1230 to 1400 CARVERY LUNCH e-mail: [email protected] website: www.holidaybridge.com 24-26 Oct (£199) 2015 BRIDGE SESSION 3 DUPLICATE PAIRS (CVV is the last 3 numbers on the signature strip) 01483 489961 Fax 01483 797302 Overcalls Alison Nicolson 7-9 Nov (£199) 1000 to 1230 SEMINAR & SUPERVISED PLAY of SET HANDS 2 (tea & coffee at 1100) , Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH 16-18 May (£199) 1815 to 2000 DINNER 0800 to 0930 BREAKFAST Expiry: ............................ CVV.................... Issue No. ............... 2008 Signals & Discards Ray Hutchinson No Single Supplement Room upgrades and special B&B rates for Sunday nights are available. *Improvers’ Weekends are aimed at the novice player and/or those picking up the game after a long break.