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Coral Pink Sand
Dunes, Utah
by Bernard Marcoux, Sainte-Adèle, Québec
To Play the
hand Movie...click
here
In southern Utah, there
is a desert where the sand is all coral.
How can the sand be
uniformly coral? How is it that there are no pebbles of other
colors?
Because the wind chooses
them. Yes!
In search of grains, the
wind ignores all the other grains, collecting only coral ones.
Blowing back in
its desert, the
wind will drop coral grains and carry away all other grains.
Amazing, is not it?
What are the functions
of the sand and the wind in the desert?
Cover everything,
absolutely everything that tries to go beyond the surface.
Are there any plants
that still grow in this desert? Yes.
Some plants have
developed a growth mode quite appropriate in the circumstances:
they try to grow faster than the sand takes to recover them.
Fascinating!
At bridge, in a doubled
contract, declarer is like a plant trying to grow in the
desert. The two defenders are the wind, unifying their
efforts to submerge declarer with sand. They must choose their
actions like the wind chooses the sand pebbles: they have to
ignore those who are too heavy, let pass those who are too light
and take only the ones who will drown the overbidders.
You have :
A843
Q8432
3
854
You East Pd West
p 1 (11-15)
p 1
p
p X p
??
Partner’s delayed
double says : Opening hand with diamonds, short in spades. Do
you pass for penalty ? The pebble is too heavy, no ? Your
spades are not strong enough to flood declarer. So, with
discipline, you bid 2 . But… help is on the way. People really
don’t like to pass.
You
East Pd West
p 1 (11-15)
p 1
p
p X p
2 2 p p
??
The wind is blowing
harder now. What do you do ? First, you have to decide if you
make 2 . Most probably. So, you are entitled to +110 or +140.
Declarer is vulnerable, down one not doubled is only +100. So
you have to double to collect +200, the
Kiss of Death at
bridge. Opponent have decided to settle in the middle of the
desert, in spite of warnings from your partner. He told them :
nothing breaks, all the points are behind opener. But people
don’t listen. So you double. Declarer should not survive in
these conditions.
You
East Pd West
p 1 (11-15)
p 1
p p X p
2 2 p p
X all
pass
What is your lead ?
Your singleton or a heart ? You decide to lead a heart to
force declarer.
Dummy
Q76
A10
Q1065
KJ93
You
A843
Q8432
3
854
Declarer wins the Ace in
dummy and plays back a heart.
Partner takes the King and, for
lack of a better return, plays the
9. Declarer plays
small. Do you take this grain of sand ? Is it the right color
? You decide it is not. Why not duck and let declarer play?
Declarer wins the Queen in dummy and plays a club.
Partner puts
the
10, declarer wins the
A and plays a diamond. You play
your singleton. Partner wins the diamond and plays back a
second spade. Declarer plays the
J.
Do you win this second
pebble? No. What
will you play after ? By
ducking, you keep control of trumps. Very important.
Declarer, almost
engulfed now under the sand, replays a diamond. You pitch a
heart and partner wins the King. He then plays the diamond Ace
and another diamond for you to ruff. You finally play the Ace
of spades. There are no more spades in dummy, so you can play a
heart.
Declarer will still lose
a club for +500 and a top.
In Coral Pink Sand Dunes, everything is back
to normal. The wind and the sand have recovered everything.
The four hands:
Dummy
Q76
A10
Q1065
KJ93
You
Pd
A843
92
Q8432
K965
3
AKJ2
854
Q102
Declarer
KJ105
J7
9874
A76
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