Linda Lee — My personal bridge blog

The Clash of the Irish… Camrose Match .. Revised

The Camrose tournament was on this weekend and I had a chance to comment on a match this morning.  If you are interested in all the teams and results of this Great Britain contest check out:

Camrose Results

England was the final winner beating out the Republic of Ireland who were second.  Wales was third and  Scotland was fourth.  Northern Ireland was a distant fifth and a second Northern Ireland team (as hosts) labeled NIBU  even further down the scoring table

The match this morning pitted the two Irish teams.  the Republic of Ireland versus Northern Ireland team.  Oddly one of the pairs on the Republic of Ireland team was not listed as one of the three pairs playing (a last minute substitution perhaps).  The pair was Karel de Raeymaker (he had Belgian parents) and Anna Onishuk (who was born in Russia).  Hence the “unIrish” names.

Their partners in the Open Room were John Carroll and Tommy Garvey.

Playing for the Northern Ireland in the Closed Room where I watched was John Murchan & Ciara Burns with their teammates Hastings Campbell & Greer MacKenzie in the Open Room.

It was an exciting match at my table with lots of bidding.  At one point I thought that Karel should have a nice cup of tea, herbal not Irish, since he needed to take it down a notch.  But then perhaps his style was just not “my cup of tea”.  Do you like these weak 2 bids?  The first one was white on red (but in second chair)

Exhibit A

s KJ943

h J6

Copy of d 873

c 764

 

Exhibit B

s QJ865

h 84

Copy of d J104

c Q84

All the bidding meant that Anna had to work extra hard and she was a fine declarer.   Perhaps the most interesting example of their style (Bid Boldly, Play Safe a la Rixi Marcus, the fine British Women Internationalist) was this deal.  Coming into Board 11 of 16 Northern Ireland was leading by 11 imps 22-11.  First let’s follow East during the bidding

s 954

h KJ643

Copy of d QJ6

c K5

White nobody vulnerable partner opens 2NT and you transfer to hearts.  What now?  Personally I bid 3NT.  If partner takes a move in hearts then I am interested and not otherwise.  Karel invited with 4NT.  The auction did eventually squeak to a halt in 5h despite partner’s maximum (with no heart fit).  The opposite hand was

s AQ102

h A10

Copy of d A75

c AQJ6

In the other room your opponents were in a more normal 3NT making 4.  So it was up to Anna to bring home 5h and I will give you a hint the hearts are 5-1.  So let’s see how she did it.  I will rotate the hand to make Anna South

  North

s 954

h KJ643

Copy of d QJ6

c K5

 
West

s J73

h Q9753

Copy of d K84

c 98

  East

s K86

h 8

Copy of d 109326

c 107432

  South

s AQ102

h A10

Copy of d A75

c AQJ6

 

The opening lead was the c9 won in dummy.  She played a heart to the ace and the h1- covered with the hQ and the hK.  South showed out with the s6.  She now played on clubs.   ruffed the third round with the h7 while Anna discarded a spade and West got out a spade.  (Well anything else was worse).    Anna won in hand and it was effectively over.  She played another club and everybody discarded (but if West ruffs she overrufs and only has a diamond to lose.  If West discards a diamond she cashes her spade, ruffs a spade and can endplay North in a red suit.  Do you like it?  I did.  And that won her an imp (some imps are better than others.

However Board 15 was the deciding match of the set.  Coming into this board Ireland led Northern Ireland 24-18.  This hand was a bidding challenge. 

West

s KJ83

h 83

Copy of d AKJ108 

c K8

Suppose you open 1NT white on red after your RHO passes.  (I wouldn’t with the weak doubletons.  What do you think?)  Anyway your partner bid 3h natural and forcing.  You bid 3NT.  Partner persists with 4c natural.  Your call?

Do you like 4Copy of d?  I don’t know  natural (I guess).  When you aren’t quite sure where partner is heading this seems like a safe bet.

Now its up to partner.  Let’s see what he does?

East

s A

h AKQ974

Copy of d Q5 

c J1053

Partner continues with 4NT.  Darn if I know what that means.   Is it a notrump raise or keycard for diamonds or for clubs or for hearts or maybe no suit at all.  Anyways partner bids 5c.  I hope they know what is going on now cause I am confused.  I supposed that West may be responding aces in a 1430 manner or maybe responding for hearts. East ended the torture with 6h.  This doesn’t seem so bad except for one minor problem.  If hearts don’t break this is going down not to mention that playing it from the East hand you have to deal with a club lead.   Playing notrump from the East hand does give you more options.  Still with hearts not breaking and no spade miracle this should go down from either side most of the time. 

You guessed it.  Hearts don’t break and 6h has no chance at all.  Is this one of those times where 6NT makes?  Not exactly.  Here is the whole hand

  North

s Q1054

h J1062

Copy of d

c A974

 
West

s KJ83

h 83

Copy of d AKJ108 

c K8

  East

s A

h AKQ974

Copy of d Q5 

c J1053

  South

s 9762

h 5

Copy of d 97432

c Q62

 

Nope there really isn’t any legitimate way to make 6NT unless you guess hearts.  North (Garvey) started with a clever h10 after West opened with 1Copy of d and East had shown great hearts.  But let’s face it heart lead or no heart lead West was not going to guess em.  West played a second heart and got the bad news.  Now West (Hastings) ran the cJ.  And North made the rather remarkable play of ducky the ace.  Perhaps he felt safe in the knowledge that the hearts were not running, declarer couldn’t have more than one spade trick etc.  But he failed to consider what he would do if West had five diamonds.  Because after he ducked Hastings cashed all of dummy’s winners and then five diamonds.  His last three cards, all black where the cK and the sKJ.  As long as Hastings could guess the ending he was destined to take two tricks and make the hand.   So the 14 imps lost on this board was a result, not of the unusual bidding in the Closed Room (6h is a fine contract) but the defensive mistake by Garvey.  And that was the match.  The final score Northern Ireland 32, Ireland 24.

Paul added ….

This set was the first 16 boards of a 32 board match. In the second set Northern Ireland surprisingly increased their lead by 4 IMPs, playing against the top two Irish pairs, to gain a rare 17-13 VP win over their southern neighbours.

Public Disasters and what Michael Rosenberg said

Bridge is a game of mistakes, it has been said (perhaps too frequently).  We all make mistakes and perhaps the most annoying is misunderstandings in the auction.  I was doing commentary on the Camrose match yesterday between Scotland and Wales.  I was in the Closed Room and the great Michael Rosenberg was doing commentary in the Open Room.  Needless to say our table had only a small number of kibbitzers.  Ray said they were all the immediate family of the players.

At out table Board 23 was a flat looking 3NT.  You might argue about the best line but on the lie of the cards all lines led to the +600 range.  Later on the result from the other table came in win 14 imps!  What could have gone wrong?

This morning I decided to have a look at the deal and the comments and see if I could figure it out.  When the deal was started Michael looking at the result in the other room was giving a profound discussion about how the play should go.  The bidding started out the same in both rooms.  Here was the East hand and the auction to the point that diverted from the Closed Room

s_thumb22 AKJ
h_thumb22 Q107 
Copyofd_thumb22 Q432 
c_thumb22 AQ7

West passed in second chair with all vulnerable:

Gary Jones Dafydd Jones    
pass 1Copyofd_thumb22    
1h_thumb22 2NT    
3c_thumb22 3h_thumb22    
3s_thumb22 ?    

While it wasn’t alerted it appeared that at least initially both partners understood that 3c_thumb22 was not natural but some sort of “new minor forcing” asking opener about majors.  It is hard to imagine that up to that point the partnership was confused since even relatively inexperienced pairs would agree that they played that convention (or not).  

After the 3h_thumb22 bid in most of my partnership if I know bid 3NT partner knows that I have four hearts and four spades.   I use the bid of 3s_thumb22 as a slam try in hearts.  But in some partnerships perhaps if you now bid 3NT it would suggest that you had five hearts and deny spades and give partner a choice of the 5-3 in hearts or 3NT.  In those partnerships to check if opener has four spades you need to continue with 3s_thumb22.  

My guess is that Dafydd was “playing’ the former.  So she thought that Gary had made a slam try and that they had found a 5-3 heart fit.  As a result she cuebid 4c_thumb22.  Now over to Gary.

s_thumb22 10652
h_thumb22 AK85 
Copyofd_thumb22 1097 
c_thumb22 104

He was playing 3s_thumb22 using the second approach and only showing 4-4.  Therefore he thought that 4c_thumb22 was a cuebid in support of spades and since he had a minimum he signed off in 4s_thumb22.   Perhaps Dafydd should have wondered about this bid.  Partner was denying controls in diamonds by bypassing that suit but in any case partner had (from her perspective) forced to the five level.  Was partner worried about heart quality or just diamonds?  She might have signed off in 5h_thumb22 but instead she decided to emphasize the quality of her clubs, deny diamonds and see where partner was heading.   So she bid 5c_thumb22.  Now Gary knew that things had gone off the rails and decided to just bail out before things got worse.  If either of them had bid 5h_thumb22 (the other one would surely have passed) they actually had some chance of making it.  5c_thumb22 had no chance and went 3 down.  5h_thumb22 would have been play from the same side and had it received the same diamond lead as 5c_thumb22 would have made.

Here is the whole deal and an very interesting comment by Michael Rosenberg

  s_thumb22 Q983
h_thumb22 J97 
Copyofd_thumb22 J85 
c_thumb22 K63
 
G. Jones
s_thumb22
10652
h_thumb22 AK85 
Copyofd_thumb22 1097 
c_thumb22 104
  D. Jones
s_thumb22
AKJ
h_thumb22 Q107 
Copyofd_thumb22 Q432 
c_thumb22 AQ7
  s_thumb22 74
h_thumb22 643 
Copyofd_thumb22 AK6 
c_thumb22 J9852
 

At the end of this deal Michael said:

“By the way, these kinds of disasters typically only occur behind screens,  Which is why I tend to rule against pairs who “extricate” themselves when there are no screens.”

Let’s think about this deal a bit more.  Clearly Gary knew when Dafydd bid 5c_thumb22 that something very bad had happened.  I kind of think he might (and I emphasize the word might) have figured out that Dayfdd thought that he was making a slam try in heats.  Similarly Dafydd might (and this is much harder) have worked out that the 4s_thumb22 bid didn’t make a whole lot of sense in the auction and have passed or gotten out in 5h_thumb22.  But behind screens they didn’t couldn’t handle it.  Suppose that Gary had heard Dafydd explain the meaning of the 3s_thumb22 bid to his opponent.  How much easier it would have been to get out in 5h_thumb22 over 5c_thumb22 and how easy it would have been to explain to the director or the committee how he had been “awoken” by the bid.  And so on… you can see how in those cases… with the best of intentions the offending side is helped by hearing the explanation.  And that is Michael’s point.

But, how can you handle it when bad things happen on your side of the table.  Its not your fault that your hearing the explanation and you do your best to ignore it.  Some times you have been awakened by the bidding and you do what you think is reasonable under the circumstances.  Is the committee supposed to think, “just shoot them, they had a misunderstanding.”  Somehow there must be a place for working things out at the table.

Still I think Michael has a point.  A strong point I never really thought of before.  And I will be more understanding of committee rulings which are very harsh on convention breaks even when they rule against me (well maybe not when it happens but when I calm down a few hours later).

And my sympathies and congratulations to the Jones’ who went on to play good bridge on the remaining boards and did their best when they got confused.  It is bad to have a disaster on one board but it is much worse to have one on the next board as well.

The Downside of Getting Active In The Auction

Commenting on the Turkish Team Championship this interesting hand came up.  First take the North hand:

s_thumb2 AJ3
h_thumb2 A976 
Copyofd_thumb2 AJ42 
c_thumb2 43

Suppose you play 1NT is 15-17 but you upgrade to open 1NT.  Partner transfer to spades and then bids 2NT.  What would you do?  I assume you would bid 3s_thumb2 and you would play it there.  Partner has 

South

s_thumb2 Q10852
h_thumb2 KJ10 
Copyofd_thumb2 85 
c_thumb2 Q75

Or suppose as in the Closed Room you opened 1Copyofd_thumb2.  Responder would bid 1s_thumb2 and depending on your style you would rebid 1NT or 2s_thumb2.  Either way you are going to play in partscore.  Let’s look at what happened in the Open Room

The auction started off with 1NT and East vulnerable against not held

East

s_thumb2 94 
h_thumb2 Q85 
Copyofd_thumb2 97 
c_thumb2 KJ10982

East was going to be on lead against no trump so no lead directing bid was required.  But in any case East doubled to show a one suiter.  South redoubled and West dutifully bid 2c_thumb2.  Now East the spade hand could have smacked this.  It was going at least one down and more if as seemed possible West misguessed clubs.  But instead East bid 3h_thumb2 an invitational hand with spades.  Now with nothing wasted in clubs despite the minimum North went to the spade game.  Let’s look at what happened then.

  North
s_thumb2
AJ3
h_thumb2 A976 
Copyofd_thumb2 AJ42 
c_thumb2 43
 
West
s_thumb2
K76
h_thumb2 432 
Copyofd_thumb2 KQ1063 
c_thumb2 A6
  East
s_thumb2
94 
h_thumb2Q85 
Copyofd_thumb2 97 
c_thumb2 KJ10982
  South
s_thumb2
Q10852
h_thumb2 KJ10 
Copyofd_thumb2 85 
c_thumb2 Q75
 

Not unreasonably the opening lead was the c_thumb2A.  West switched to a high diamond won by the ace.  With the s_thumb2K onside declarer only had to locate the h_thumb2Q.  East had to have it on the bidding since he had no other high cards.  So the game was made for a 7 imp swing.  There are more downsides to getting too active than just going for a number.

Bridge, hockey, bridge, oh my … Olympics!

Today was a day full of bridge and HOCKEY and bridge and cheering and the closing ceremonies.  I realized something, this Olympics really brought Canada closer together, it really brought out our patriotism.  We went from polite and deferential to proud and boisterous.  Don’t worry it won’t last but it has been fun.  My daughter who lives in Vancouver saw it all.  She was near Stephen Harper (the P.M.) at the curling.  She cheered Canada in the Canada-Russia hockey game.  But she decided to watch the final hockey game at home.  I think the pressure (and the ticket prices) were too much but she did go downtown afterwards to celebrate with her whole family.  I was playing bridge during the hockey game and giving the table updates.  “It’s 2-1 oh no they tied it with a few seconds left and so on.”  I played some “hockey” bridge too i.e. a terrible bid just about the time the US tied it.  Sorry Sylvia.

Main Image

Tonight I played with Colin and Isabelle and Sondra in a team game and later head on head.  Colin and I did have a good set.  Here is a bid that Colin got right.  I don’t make these bids with everybody!  Colin held

s_thumb2 K7
h_thumb2 AK52 
Copyofd_thumb2 AKJ
c_thumb2 10964

White on red he opened 1c_thumb2 strong and artificial.  Sondra bid 2Copyofd_thumb2 majors or minors and I bid 3c_thumb2 natural and positive (game forcing).  Isabelle bid 3Copyofd_thumb2 pass or correct and Colin raised clubs with 4c_thumb2.  Sondra passed and I bid an undiscussed 5s_thumb2.  Back to Colin.  My terrific son bid 7c_thumb2.  He was quite happy about it when dummy came down.  I held

s_thumb2 void
h_thumb2 Q6
Copyofd_thumb2 Q762
c_thumb2 AKQJ852

When the opening heart lead was not ruffed Colin claimed saying “Glad we were on the same wavelength!”  It was my highest ever splinter.  Do you like it?

We had another cool slam during the team game.   I held

s_thumb2 K102
h_thumb2 AKQ10854 
Copyofd_thumb2 void
c_thumb2 J85

Nobody was vulnerable and I decided to open a slightly light Namyats showing about 8 tricks with hearts as trump.  So sue me for 1/2 a trick.  Colin bid 4s_thumb2 over 4c_thumb2 showing a slam try with controls in two suits, spades and another.  I show my diamond control and Colin bid the heart slam.  He had:

s_thumb2 AJ3
h_thumb2
Copyofd_thumb2 10875
c_thumb2 AKQ72

Now you may notice that seven is very good.  And we discussed how to get there afterwards.   Colin’s first problem is that he doesn’t know if I have first or second round control of diamonds.  He also doesn’t know my trumps are solid.  At the other table my hand opened 1h_thumb2 which I can hardly argue with and Sondra bid a very aggressive 2s_thumb2 on s_thumb2Q98754 and out.  Colin’s hand bid clubs which should have made it easier.  Anyway this was there whole auction

Linda Opponent Sondra Colin Opponent Isabelle
1h_thumb2 2s_thumb2 3c_thumb2 pass
3h_thumb2 pass 3NT pass
4h_thumb2 all pass    

Their auction doesn’t seem that bad although the heart hand should really like the K102 of spades after partner bids notrump and the nice juicy club fit.  Partner almost certainly has a heart for the notrump bid….hmmm.

Anyway I think seven is hard to get to.  Does anybody see the way?

Isabelle and Sondra got to some nice slams too.  They had a nice auction to their own grand slam.  We were silent throughout.  

Sondra held

s_thumb2 AKQJ
h_thumb2 AK 
Copyofd_thumb2 AQ7
c_thumb2 J1094

She opened 1c_thumb2 which is forcing and shows a variety of different hands.  Isabelle showed a limit raise in clubs.  Sondra relayed asking Isabelle about her hand and Isabelle showed some values in hearts denied values in diamonds and showed a maximum.  Sondra bid keycard and Isabelle showed all the missing ones.  Sondra could them bid the grand.  Isabelle held

s_thumb2 9
h_thumb2 J86 
Copyofd_thumb2 10864
c_thumb2 AKQ63

Colin and I would probably have a decent shot at this playing forcing club after I showed a positive with five clubs.  But how do you get there in a different system.  Playing with Julie, we can show a balanced 24 count and South can show 5 clubs, that might work.  North is awfully big.  A nice auction ladies.  This was not reached by the BBO field.  Funny in 12 boards we played 7c_thumb2 once each way.  Amazing.

And then Neil Young sang as the Olympic flame when out Long May You Run

 

"Long May You Run"
We’ve been through
some things together
With trunks of memories
still to come
We found things to do
in stormy weather
Long may you run.
Long may you run.
Long may you run.
Although these changes
have come
With your chrome heart shining
in the sun
Long may you run.

A very interesting squeeze

I was doing commentary in the eleventh round of the Izmir Teams Championship 2010

The day after the storm

Izmir Turkey above, on the Aegan Sea looks quite lovely.  But I am going to talk about just one board, Board 6.  East-West were vulnerable.  This hand is interesting both bidding and play.  East opened 1NT and South held

s_thumb2 109543
h_thumb2 void
Copyofd_thumb2 72
c_thumb2 J107642

South who was, no doubt, influenced by the vulnerability bid 2s_thumb2 (spades and a minor).  West bid a forcing 3Copyofd_thumb2 and North passed.   East held

s_thumb2 Q76
h_thumb2 A962
Copyofd_thumb2 Q53
c_thumb2 AK9

What do you like here?  I might bid 3s_thumb2 to see if partner could add something to my iffy spade stopper.  I might bid 3NT with a diamond fit and at least some control of spades.  East bid 3h_thumb2 which I am sure was meant as natural.  South passed and let’s look at the West hand

s_thumb2 AJ8
h_thumb2 KQ8
Copyofd_thumb2 AJ10984
c_thumb2 8

West was definitely thinking slam and bid 4NT.  I am not sure if this was intended as Blackwood but anyway partner bid 5h_thumb2.  I am pretty sure that East was responding to keycard for hearts.  South doubled showing a heart void which propelled East to bid 6NT rather than 6Copyofd_thumb2

But the double is going to affect the play as well (or it should have).  Let’s put the hand together

  North
s_thumb2
K2
h_thumb2 J107543
Copyofd_thumb2 K6
c_thumb2 Q53
 
West
s_thumb2
AJ8
h_thumb2 KQ8
Copyofd_thumb2 AJ10984
c_thumb2 8
  East
s_thumb2
Q76
h_thumb2 A962
Copyofd_thumb2 Q53
c_thumb2 AK9
  South
s_thumb2
109543
h_thumb2 void
Copyofd_thumb2 72
c_thumb2 J107642
 

South led the c_thumb2J and East won and play the Copyofd_thumb2Q.  (South missed the inning spade lead).  North won and returned a club.  East won pitching a spade.  West now run diamonds.  North is as it turns out squeezed in three suits.  North should be thinking, I need to hold five cards.  I know partner has no hearts so I must no matter what hold four hearts.  Therefore I can only hold one spade and no clubs.  North should throw the spade early and similarily the c_thumb2Q.  In fact the c_thumb2Q should go before the c_thumb25. 

Now let’s go back to East.  Suppose that North had come down to that ending.  East would then run hearts.  The idea is to squeeze South in spades and clubs.  We arrive at this ending after all the hearts are run:

  North
s_thumb2
K
h_thumb2 J
Copyofd_thumb2
c_thumb2
 
West
s_thumb2
AJ
h_thumb2
Copyofd_thumb2
c_thumb2
  East
s_thumb2

h_thumb2 9
Copyofd_thumb2
c_thumb2 9
  South
s_thumb2
10
h_thumb2 void
Copyofd_thumb2
c_thumb2 10

Now East has to decide if South has two spades K10  and North is holding the h_thumb2J and the c_thumb210 or the spades are as pictured.  If South held the s_thumb2K he would have had 6 spades king and five clubs jack rather than the 6-5 he actually held.  It does seem a bit more likely.  But, the opening lead was a give away.  South would not have lead the c_thumb2J without the c_thumb210.  So East should get it right.  So it turns out that not only did South fail to find the killing spade lead but the c_thumb2J was a bit of a disaster.  If South had led a small club and North had played in tempo throwing a spade earlier and the clubs out of order, I think there is a quite reasonable chance that East would get it wrong.

At the other table where there was no opposition bidding South did lead a small club, but East had an even tougher job on the run of the clubs (with no idea about the heart distribution and pitched a heart early on so declarer had no problem here either. 

This hand is not a pure double squeeze.   North was triple squeezed on the last diamond forced to give up spades or clubs.  So I suppose this is not unlike a compound squeeze.  Once North gave up clubs then the double squeeze was set up.   Even if North did not have the only spade stopper he would still have been triple squeezed.  Suppose South held the s_thumb2Q, North would have had to hold his s_thumb2K and abandon clubs, a guard squeeze.  What if South could stop spades on his own with say the s_thumb2KQ?

Now East has no role in guarding spades and can just hold clubs and hearts and there is no double squeeze, the entries just don’t work out. 

Arm Hurts

I fell down the stairs yesterday.  It is a twisty staircase from the attic to the bedroom on the second floor.  I saved myself with my right arm but it paid the price.  My right arm hurts a lot when I type (or really when I do anything at all).  I think I did something unspeakable to my right tricep and maybe part of the shoulder.

I mention this by way of an excuse for less blogging and even more mistakes than usually.  Many of you have pointed out errors I have made and some of you have just ignored the little typos.  I thank all of you.  I can’t help it.  My brain is wired that way.  It moves quickly but not accurately (a butterfly with a broken wing?)

I really want to thank the squeezer who downloaded the Problem Hands from Clyde E. Love.  He found some interesting points although as it turned out the analysis of the squeeze was not wrong in either hand. We are updating the Problem Hands right now – fixed should be online in a day or two. Thanks to Rainer Herrmann.  Any more feedback would be welcome.  The squeeze deals can be downloaded for free at www.ebooksbridge.com.

Thanks also to Richard Pavlicek who found the dreaded 12-14 combo in my blog on www.masteringbridge.com.  I am writing a bit about signaling for bridge students.  One of the things I am thinking about now as I am about to do attitude signals is how to explain to students when count is appropriate and when attitude. 

I have a busy weekend playing bridge coming up so I hope my arm isn’t too distracting.  I am thinking about buying some kind of support.  I can actually type but I have to be careful to make sure my upper arm doesn’t get moved while I do it.

In between playing bridge there is the men’s curling final and some hockey games to watch.  If the Canadian men make it to the final I will be watching it while playing bridge.  I am not sure how Colin will cope since he is my partner at that time – he will have to work out how to get a computer near the TV.

We are making a lot of progress on our new design for bridge blogging.  It is going to have a lot more pictures including bloggers pictures on the home page.   So watch for it in a few weeks.

To Bid the Major or Not to Bid the Major

Now that Canadian has won the Ice Dancing medal in an incredible display of grace and beauty we have all stopped obsessing about losing that silly hockey game.  Well at least most of us have come out of mourning.

ice dance Figure Skating Ice Dances - Vancouver 2010

Canadian duo of Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir

So since you asked Paul, here is what I have been thinking about regarding opener’s rebids with a minimum balanced hand and perhaps we can start a discussion.

The sequences are these

A) 1c_thumb2 – 1Copyofd_thumb2 OR B) 1c_thumb2-1h_thumb2 OR C) 1Copyofd_thumb2-1h_thumb2

The issue is should you opener rebid 1NT or bid a major at the one level.   In example A) opener could have hearts or spades and in B) and C) opener could have spades.  She now has a choice of bidding 1NT or the major suit.   As always part of this decision is based on how it fits into the entire system.  In our case we play strong notrump and responder was bypassing diamonds to bid a major on weak hands with up to five diamonds.   Over 1NT we had no way to checkback for the major on less than an invitational hand.

Still, if responder almost always bypasses diamonds to bid a major suit with less than a major suit you would that does remove example A) as being a problem.  If responder has a major suit then she will either already have bid it or will have a good enough hand to check for it.  That means that only B) and C) are issues and as you point it this revolves around the spade suit.

If opener rebids 1NT now and responder has less than an invitational hand (which over 12-14 would be about 11) you may “lose” the spade suit.  Apart from playing in an inferior part score, you may miss a game when you have a fit and a maximum and you may sometimes have a problem competing effectively when the opponents enter the auction.  So it appears that the simplest solution is to bid 1s_thumb2 on hands B) and C) when opener has spades and bidding 1NT denies four spades.

What is the downside to this?  When partner rebids 1s_thumb2 you have a huge range of hands,  You don’t know whether partner is balanced or not.  Responder is under pressure to bid again in case opener has a good hand.  You may wind up in an inferior partscore, since you will either play 1NT from the weak side or in many cases responder will give preference on a weak hand and wind up in a suit contract when 1NT would have been better.   Unless responder has four spades you may still have trouble competing on some hands.  Since responder doesn’t know if your minor was a real suit or a three card suit she can’t effectively compete in the minor. 

My personal bias is to rebid 1NT on the balanced hands and have a way to checkback for a major fit on any hand where responder is at least 5-4 in the majors, with hands that are not quite invitational but would be good enough for a game try if you find a fit.  But this doesn’t really solve the problem when responder is say 4-4-1-4 with about a ten count.

Playing weak notrump this problem is less acute.  Here when opener rebids 1NT she has 15-17 so responder usually can make a try on a hand that might make game with a spade fit and with a checkback mechanism you can even handle weak hands (less than 8) with 4-4 fits as long when you are 4-4-4-1 with support for partner’s minor, any 5-4 in the majors or 4-4 in the majors with a preference to play the 4-3 rather than play notrump.

Conclusion:

No system handles everything.  At imps playing strong notrump you probably should consider rebidding  1s_thumb2 on auctions starting 1 minor-1h_thumb2 or having some way to look for spades over 1NT with a hand in the 9 or 10 point range especially.

We decided radically to never bid 1NT with a major and to stop bypassing diamonds.  I am not sure how this will work out.  We will see.

Lots of bridge

It seems like this is my time to play lots of bridge and with lots of partners.  Yesterday I played with Colin and Julie and tomorrow I play with Sylvia.  Julie and I were actually just bidding so there is less to report on that front unless you want to chat about whether opener should rebid one of a major with a balanced minimum or 1NT, there, I thought you wouldn’t. 

But Colin and I had a lot of action.  This time we spent most of the evening playing with Isabelle and Sondra as team-mates.  Still a lot happened.   We won some imps partly because Colin and I didn’t bid when the opponents did.  And if you get overboard against Isabelle and Sondra you are going to play the hand doubled.  Here is an example.

I held

s_thumb AQ984

h_thumb 873 

Copyofd_thumb J6

c_thumb 1076Nobody vulnerable I passed in first chair as did my compatriot in the other room.  And at both tables the auction continued 1Copyofd_thumb pass (by partner) 1h_thumb.  So do you think I should bid one lead directing spade?  I thought about it but wondered if partner would take the joke.  At our table the opponents wended their way to 3h_thumb and we let them have an uptrick when we erred a bit on defense.  At the other table my hand overcalled.  Partner who held

s_thumb J75

h_thumb KJ65 

Copyofd_thumb A85

c_thumb Q85was pushed to 3s_thumb over 3Copyofd_thumb.  As it turned out the hand was not favorable to our side and this went for 500.  I am not saying I did a brilliant thing or even the right thing.  I was just noting that on occasion keeping quiet is a good thing.

Sylvia and I played on a team game.  Pamela and Francine were sitting in the same seats as we were and we had some opponents who had a star or two but I didn’t know.  It is interesting to compare some of our results although a lot of the differences were caused by our opponents.  At our table we had an aggressive pair who were playing a forcing club system.   

Now I have reported about how everybody bids a lot against an opening strong club bid.  Well it turns out I am no exception.  With nobody vulnerable North opened 1c_thumb and I held

s_thumb 8

h_thumb Q87632 

Copyofd_thumb K43

c_thumb K86

I had a rush of blood to my head and overcalled 2h_thumb.  South doubled showing any 6-8 and this was passed to his partner who held

s_thumb AQ1096

h_thumb A1094 

Copyofd_thumb Q8

c_thumb KJ

I can see the thought process.  Game seems unlikely opposite 5-8.  I will take a chance that partner doesn’t have spades and pass.  But partner held the right hand to make the spade game likely.

s_thumb K7543 

h_thumb K5 

Copyofd_thumb J7

c_thumb 9732

The worse part was that they didn’t find the defense against 2h_thumb doubled although it isn’t an easy defense to find.  Here is the whole deal.

   

At the other table where North opened 1s_thumb it was easy to find the spade game which would probably have made on the auction.  Pamela and Francine did well to find the diamond save but it still cost them but they still lost 11 imps.

This little number at our table was a well deserved lose for North who decided who held

s_thumb

h_thumb K2 

Copyofd_thumb A864

c_thumb J98764

After I opened 1s_thumb in fourth and Sylvia bid 1NT he ventured out vulnerable with 2c_thumb.  I doubled and that was 800 for the good guys.  Without the intervention we would doubtlessly have been in the same 4s_thumb contract as Pamela and Francine which was destined to go down because of bad breaks.

Anyway I am done with my bridge marathon.  After this I have lots of lunches and dinners.  Eric our intern, is leaving for around the world tour, yes he is, and Jessica has taken the reins.  Eric just finished our facebook page for ABTA teacher of the month, have a look at it, become a fan!  So before he leaves its a lunch on the company.  Lots more meals beside that one.

More Olympic Lessons

 

In the Canada-Sweden curling game early on when the score was a Canadian player erred and accidentally touched a rock (one that was stationary in the house) with his foot.  Kevin pointed it out the Swedish skip and instead of invocating any penalty just put the rock back in its original position.  So the good sportsmanship continues in curling. 

Canadians also celebrate athletes who come 10 or 12 or 6th or whatever as long as they try hard and do their best.  In thinking about it there is something to celebrate when somebody comes does a personal best.  Maybe in sporting events list this we focus too much on winning and losing.  Do you think that celebrating good effort will lead to less excellence?  more participation?  ultimately better performance?  or who cares?

An interesting corollary to this is that apparently the Canadian downhill skiers decided to take a lot of risk and “gold or nothing”.  All 3 fell and got nothing.  Is this the best thing to do?  Maybe?  Perhaps it is the getting of the gold that inspires new players to enter the sport.

What do we have today that inspires new players to decide to compete at bridge.  Not much.  At least not much that has any publicity.  A few things.  But not much.

I was amused by two things in the paper yesterday.  First Stephen Colbert (who I really enjoy watching) has gone to the Vancouver Olympics complete with fake snow and a moose.  In the photo below the moose is featured along with Stephen and Bob Costa.  Apparently he explained to onlookers that if he was covering the games without benefit of marijuana.  (Hmm maybe that would help when I get a bit nervous before a big game!)

 

And a second article talked about how Canadians had visit a “Sports Shaman” before the games.   The skeleton racers had their sleds blessed, built a totem pole and painted it with their hopes and dreams.  Part of their exercise was to discover their spirit or power animal.  One of them was a turtle for example (which seems a bit strange for people who want to go really really fast).  Anyway I was thinking about the power of attitude, thinking and dealing with performance anxiety.  Maybe this really does help.  I don’t think I would go as far as painting a totem pole but maybe I need to find my spirit animal.  I want a TALL spirit animal maybe a giraffe might be the best  (not for peaking no, no).

Which brings me back to Canadian bridge.  On my to do list I am going to go back to working on fund raising for Canadian teams.  Its great that people enjoy playing in the world championships but it seems like we ought to care about doing well too.  Maybe it would be better to raise money for training or creating a better program than for sending teams.

It is wonderful to watch Kevin Martin curl.  The team has trained hard, this is what they do, they curl.  Each man knows his role.  Each is an expert at executing that role.

In the end we need to strive for excellence.  You can’t always win.  But you can always put out a good performance.

Now then there is the Canadian men hockey players… they sucked last night … but not going there.

Redesigning Bridge Blogging and Other Happenings At MPP

We have decided to redesign bridge blogging to make it more attractive and more useable.  These are our current plans and we would be happy for any input.  You can reply to me at [email protected] or you can leave a comment right here.  At this point we are still in the early stages of design so input is great.

The idea is that we will separate out different types of blogs.  We will have one section for all of the newspaper feeds including Aces On Bridge.  We will have another section for personal blogs that are hosted on this site.   In all cases you can comment on these blogs.  The third section will be blogs hosted on other sites where we pick up the feed.  In many cases you cannot leave comments.  While we try to be selective with this third category they are more varied.

Another section will be used by us to bring you coverage of major events, contests, holiday stuff and announcements.

Links will be consolidated and in many cases there will be a link to a page with “other recommended links”. 

We will be trying to use the screen better as well.  The current blogs are designed to fit even on screens with the smallest resolution without scrolling.  The new design will use the sides better which should still suit almost everybody.  We plan to have more color and more pictures.

Both the bridge blogging home page and individual blog pages will be redesigned.

Some Other MPP Happenings

Honors Ebooks

We will be introducing our first two Honors ebooks on our www.ebooksbridge.com website in about two weeks.  We have some more in the works.  If you have a book you always wanted to publish then this is your chance.  The FAQ for authors for Honors ebooks should be available by the end of next week.  Even if you publish your ebook elsewhere you can still publish with ebooks bridge as well.

ABTA Teacher Of The Year On Facebook Soon

You can still nominate a teacher for ABTA MPP Teacher of the Year.  We have had a huge (really huge) number of applicants.  You would not believe how very passionate North American bridge students are about their teachers.   We will be putting up a new Facebook page (it is being designed right not) to honor these teachers.  We will keep you posted.  You will want to be a FAN of these very worthy people.  We will have some bio information and pictures.  We can only give one the award but we can honor all of them.

And of course MPP will be sponsoring Canadian international bridge teams for the next 4 years.  We now sponsor a book (IBPA MPP Bridge Book of the Year). a teacher (ABTA MPP Teacher of the year) and a team (Canada Master Point Press).