Nine A Dancing
On January 2nd Ray and I were playing bridge together against Tom and Judy Dawson. Tom and Judy are long-time friends who are not only bridge players but world-class collectors of playing cards. Tom is also an amateur historian who knows a lot about the history of bridge in Canada.
Ray and I have both taken a vow of silence. By that I mean that no matter what, we won’t yell at each other.
I am sitting North with both vulnerable. This is my hand
Ray is in first chair and he opens 3♣ . We play that an opening 3NT is a minor-suit preempt and shows an eight-card suit with the quality varying based on the vulnerability. So 3♣ at this vulnerability shows seven decent clubs. Judy on my right bids 4S and I am left to ponder my action. I have an easy double. I have enough of a surprise in trumps that I am certain I can beat this hand, maybe several tricks. It looks like I have good defense. Ray is quite likely to have a club trick. Tom passes and Ray thinks for a brief moment.
Whatever could he be thinking about? Then he bids 5♣ . What is he doing?! Judy doubles this and everyone passes. Judy leads the ♠ A. I remember my vow of silence and when I put down dummy I do not say a word but I do scowl. I have enough faith in Ray’s preempting skills to believe he has a reason for his actions. Still, I can’t think of a reason for him to pull my double.
I am not surprised when Ray ruffs the ♠ A. Ray lays down the ♣ A and seems untroubled when Judy plays the ♣ 3 and Tom shows out. How many clubs does he have? Maybe he started with eight to the ace empty and decided to treat it as a three-level preempt, vulnerable. Or maybe Ray was playing a deeper game.
Next Ray cashes the top two diamonds and comes back to his hand with a spade ruff. He leads a third diamond. Judy ruffs in front of dummy with the ♣ Q.
It looks like Ray started with: ♠ void ♥ xx ♦ xxx ♣ Axxxxxxx. Judy seems to think so too and she plays the ♥ A. Ray follows with the ♥ 3 and Tom plays an encouraging 9 and then Ray claims!
This is the whole deal
I was glad that I was a silent wife. But I can’t resist saying, “I did have a great dummy for you.”
Tom and Judy take it in good spirits too. Ray had fooled us all. With a nine-card suit he decided to walk the dog. It isn’t Ray’s style to preempt and then bid again. I should have figured it out. He had done the 9-card suit “two-step”.
While I might be able to figure out a hand that makes sense with this auction where I can defeat 4♠ and he is going down in 5♣ , when you have nine of them you don’t sell out to a game.
In later discussion he did say that he thought that the right action on his hand was to bid 5♣ in the first place but in honor of an old friend of ours who used to create auctions like this he thought he’d try it out. Best wishes, Bambino.