Hands from the USBC’s Bulletin 1

Justin Lall, Joe Grue, John Hurd, foto: Peg Kaplan

Another Day … Another Practice!

 

A J 10 8 4 2
A J 2
4 2
K 8

Q 9 7 5 3
8
K Q J 5
9 6 3

 


K 6 3
 A 10 8 7 6 3
 A J 5 4

 

 K 6
Q 10 9 7 5 4 
 9
Q 10 7 2

West          North          East           South

Katz          Jacobs           Nickell          Beatty

                   1                    2                 Doblo

4           Pass                   5                Pass

Pass         Doblo               Fin

    Katz and Nickell bid aggressively to the 20 point game.  Beatty led the king of spades which Nickell ruffed in hand. Nickell led a diamond to dummy and played the singleton eight of hearts toward his king. Jacobs ducked!! His duck was fatal. Nickell won his king, ruffed a heart in dummy, and played a club to his jack and Beatty’s queen. Steve had no trumps to lead and was helpless. He exited his hand with a heart which Nickell ruffed in dummy. Nickell played a club to his ace and another to Beatty’s ten before claiming 11 tricks. Had Jacobs risen with his heart ace, he could have played a second round of trump leaving declarer with ten tricks  max! +750 was worth 11.1 IMPs to Nickell and Katz.


If I Had a Nickell for Every Grand…

 

Q
K Q 7 6 5 4 3
K J 7
K J

K J 9 7 4 3
9
Q 10 3
10 5 4

 

10 6 5
J 8
8 6 5 4 2
8 7 6

 

A 8 2
A 10 2
A 9
A Q 9 3 2

West                North          East                          South

Roger Lee       Nickell       Raghu Rajkunar     Katz

                                                 Pass                              1

 2                   3               Pass                              3

Pass                  4               Pass                              4NT

Pass                   5              Pass                              5 (tengo la dama)

Pass                   7              Fin

Nickell and Katz had an excellent auction to arrive at the cold grand slam in hearts. 
Nick made a key bid when he responded four clubs to Ralph’s three spade cue. Katz certainly felt more confident bidding Key Card knowing that his partner held what was the most important side king on this hand. 
Nick’s 5D bid showed all the key cards and Katz made a try for the grand. 
When Katz asked for the queen of trump, it was easy for Nick to bid seven hearts with all the second round 
controls plus the lady in question. 
Bidding and making the grand was worth 12.1 IMPs.


 Grand Slams Abound … Everyone’s Ready to Hold the Cards!  

 

Q
K Q 7 6 5 4 3
K J 7
K J

K J 9 7 4 3
9
Q 10 3
10 5 4

 

10 6 5
J 8
8 6 5 4 2
8 7 6

 

A 8 2
A 10 2
A 9
A Q 9 3 2

 

West North East South
Howard Liu Bathhurst Peg Kaplan Justin Lall
    1NT Pass
4 Pass 4NT Pass
7  Fin    
       
West North East South
S.Deutsch  
Josh Donn J.Kranyak  Roger Lee
    1NT Pass
4 Pass 4NT Pass
7NT Fin    

While both grand slams are cold, and the difference mathematically is miniscule, 7NT is clearly better on two counts: One, it scores more… and Two, there is NO danger of a ruff off the opening lead. On the other hand, if you are going to bid 7NT, shouldn’t you set diamonds as trumps so you can ask for specific kings?

MAS DEL MISMO AUTOR

When they Redouble…

Partner makes a takeout double and your RHO redoubles

And this Happened … in 1939

Bridge experts here are agreed that there is no chance of American players barring the fascinating ace-showing in bidding as the Portland club in London is reported to have done.

Alejandro Bianchedi Interview

Meet Alejandro Bianchedi the brand new member of the Lavazza team. You will have the opportunity to see him play in a few days ... Watch his video report by Fernando Lema.

Tasa San Pablo 2014: D’Orsi wins the Cup

d'Orsi Team wins the 2014 San Pablo Cup: E D'ORSI - M FIGUEIREDO - J P CAMPOS - M VILAS BOAS - G JUNQUEIRA - R ILÍBIO FERNANDES

2014 Junior World Championships Teams Selected

The Junior United States Bridge Championships (JUSBC), which selected the USBF teams for the 2014 World Junior Championships, to be held in August, 2014 in Istanbul Turkey, took place Dec 31-Jan 2 at the Hyatt Regency in Atlanta. Foto: Adam Kaplan, Zach Brescoll, Adam Grossack, Zach Grossack, Owen Lien, Marius Agica

Franck Riehm elected as WBF President

The World Bridge Federation is pleased to announce the...

1st South American Online Mixed Teams Championship

All players belonging to any NBO affiliated to the WBF are welcome!

I Brazilian Online Bridge Festival 2020

Some of the best players in the world are Brazilians, and some of the most enthusiastic players too! Our Brazilian Online Festival has appeal to players of all levels. Your team will play in a friendly but competitive atmosphere, with very well-organized scoring and experienced Directors to ensure a pleasant experience for all.

WBF Robot Tournaments

Come and join the competition through our Providers, BBO, Funbridge and Ourgame, all offering you this great opportunity – we look forward to some challenging tournaments!”

The Endplay

An endplay (also throw-in), in bridge, is a tactical play where a defender is put on lead at a strategic moment, and then has to make a play that loses one or more tricks.

The Scissors Coup by John Brown

Scissors coup (or, Scissor coup, ) is a type of coup in bridge, so named because it cuts communications between defenders.

World Bridge Federation – Youth

The Championship is open to all players born on or after 1st January 1992 (Juniors & Girls) or born on or after 1st January 1997 (Youngsters) or born on or after 1st January 2002 (Kids) in good standing with their own NBOs.

Prevent a Ruff by Jon Brown

West led his singleton club, which dummy's king won. South read the lead as a singleton.

RELACIONADOS

CATEGORIAS POPULARES