Dealer: N Vul: Both | North ♠ 5 ♥ JT84 ♦ Q954 ♣ JT97 | |
West ♠ 9642 ♥ AK5 ♦ 63 ♣ AK64 | East ♠ QT73 ♥ 73 ♦ AKJ87 ♣ 52 | |
South ♠ AKJ8 ♥ Q962 ♦ T2 ♣ Q83 |
This is a blog about my experiences in bridge - bridge ethics, defensive problems, play problems, tournament results, junior bridge, and notes about canape, and Fantunes systems. Read about my computer ranking system for college football (Click college football under popular subjects or visit Asbury CFB Rankings and Predictions.), read Je Veux Voyager.
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Wernher Qualification Adventures
Yesterday, Sean and I managed to qualify for the Wernher Open Pairs finals. The evening session was overall one of the worst sessions of bridge I have played in awhile but we were dealt about a 66% game so were okay to survive. However I did play one hand well, good for 21.5 out of 25. RHO opened 1C, I overcalled 1NT, and we staymaned to 4S. Really, though, getting to 4S and avoiding the singleton spade lead was the good part. I had already gone down on a cold contract by trying to beer and this time I wasn't going to be deluded into taking an inferior line of play to possibly beer.
North dutifully led the J of clubs and the play proceeded, club AK, club ruff, diamond AK, heart AK, heart ruff, diamond. South has no counter to this. if he doesn't ruff, I ruff low, then ruff a club with the 10 and my 9 will score a trump trick at the end. If he ruffs with the 8, I overruff and do the same thing. If he ruffs with the J, I discard my club and he can only take his two top trumps. It's kind of an interesting position. A trump lead allows the defense to play 4 rounds of trumps and make it a notrump contract, which has virtually no chance to make besides the pseudo-squeeze possibilities.
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thank you
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