by Michael Rosenberg June 12, 2013
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This was board 27 of the second day of the USA 1 Final (board 87 of the match). Positions have been changed for convenience.
John Kranyak was South. When his partner showed a game-forcing hand with diamonds and RHO bid 3
, he was able to picture his partner’s likely hand. Then, having accomplished that, he then planned the entire play DURING THE AUCTION. He was going to make the hand on a trump squeeze, as long as he did not get an initial spade lead (and a heart lead seemed far more likely).

Planning the play during the bidding is something I always try to consider – and this is a world-class example of doing this. Color me impressed.
Another thing to consider from this hand; when it went pass – 1
to me, I was a little leery about bidding 2
. Facing a passed partner, I am loath to make a bid that more or less reveals my entire hand unless I think I have a good chance to become the declaring side – thus giving the opponents a road map on how to play if they declare.
So, while 2
is the ‘normal’ bid, it is perhaps not the wisest one.
Indeed, in the other room, the player in my seat (I think it was Kevin Dwyer) overcalled in a major suit. Which one? Well, again, many would think it’s more normal to overcall in the stronger suit – hearts. But he overcalled 1
, perhaps on the clever principle of having the ‘better’ suit as a surprise attack in 3NT. This especially makes sense when the suits you hold are majors (where the opponents’ most likely game is 3NT).

Indeed, after the 1
overcall, my teammates reached 3NT-down on a heart lead.
A lot of gourmet food for thought on this hand….
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