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I
recently
played in a regional in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. It was a most
enjoyable tournament�fun town, good hotel and mostly nice
people. The only complaint I heard was from one couple that was
frustrated that they had to play against me! Those of you who know
me personally, realize that I am always kind at the table, and
would never be an unfriendly opponent. I don�t bite. Yet, I was told that it was �unfair� and
not right that they should have to come to a bridge tournament and
face a �top player� such as me. Okay�so now, I actually will
be a little nasty. Why must this attitude exist? I would give
anything to play a round of golf against Tiger Woods. Sure, he�d
slaughter me, but so what? What�s
the big deal if someone plays just one measly match (or sometimes
it might even be only 2 boards of a pair game) against a top
player? So what if
they get a bad result? Shouldn�t
this be a privilege? Wouldn�t it be fun if they actually beat
the expert(s)? Isn�t that the way to get better? I just don�t
understand.
Now,
on to some bridge. Early in the tournament, I faced a most unusual
situation late in the bidding. My partner opened one heart and I
held:
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♠
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AJ2
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♥
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J984
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♦
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3
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♣
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AQJ107
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I think this hand is too good for a splinter
bid. Maybe 2♣
is the right call, but I thought that might make it easy for the
opponents to eventually find the killing opening lead. So, I
withheld any information about my hand and instead asked about
partner�s. I bid 2NT,
Jacoby. Partner bid 3♥,
which meant he had no voids or singletons, but not a dead minimum
hand (with a minimum, he�d have signed off in 4♥). Now what?
Slam was still in the picture, so I made a
control-bid of 3♠.
LHO doubled for the lead, and this was passed back to me. At this
point, I redoubled. A redouble of such a control-bid should
promise specifically first-round control (an ace or a
void). After my redouble, partner bid four diamonds showing a
control there.
I decided he had shown enough slam interest
that it was time for Blackwood. He responded to show 3 keycards.
This meant he had the A♦, A♥ and K♥. I now asked for the trump queen and
he showed it. When showing the trump queen, you can also show side
kings. His answer (6♥)
meant that along with his trump queen, he had NO side kings at
all. What did this all mean and what should I bid?
Partner has no singletons or voids and you
know a spade lead is coming. Picture the play. He will be able to
ruff some diamonds in dummy and he will be able to draw trump, but
then what? He will need to take a club finesse. If it loses, he
won�t make even a small slam [the opponents will cash their
spade trick(s)]. What if the club finesse wins? In that case,
partner will probably take all 13 tricks.
Have you ever heard someone say it is a �5
or 7� hand? Well, this it. (It might even be a �4 or 7�
hand.) There was no good reason to play in six hearts�12 tricks
exactly were not in the picture. So, as the saying goes, �in for
a penny, in for a pound,� I bid 7♥ and this was the full deal:
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Dlr: North
Vul: Both
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North
(Larry)
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♠
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AJ2
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♥
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J984
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♦
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3
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♣
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AQJ107
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West
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East
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♠
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543
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♠
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KQ1098
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♥
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63
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♥
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72
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♦
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KQ7652
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♦
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10983
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♣
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K83
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♣
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54
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South
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♠
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76
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♥
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AKQ105
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♦
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AJ4
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♣
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962
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The
Bidding:
South
North
1♥
2NT
3♥
3♠ (X)
P
XX
4♦
4NT
5♣
5♦
6♥
7♥
P
After the expected spade lead (or any other
lead), there was nothing to the play. With the club finesse onside
(thank you!), my partner took an easy 13 tricks for +2210. Had the
club finesse lost, we�d have been down 200. Yes, 6♥
would be down only 100 in that case, but surely the risk/reward
for being in seven was well worth the gamble.
We had two other fun deals at the same
tournament. First, I had a hand with 8-5 distribution. As soon as
I picked up this hand, I had a flashback:
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♠
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--
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♥
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--
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♦
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KQJ85
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♣
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KJ1097652
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The last time I held 8-5 distribution was
25 years ago and it was maybe the most famous deal of my life.
Anyone who wishes to play that deal can do so on my website
(download the free demo of �My Favorite 52�--that infamous
deal is appropriately, �Deal #1�). With my modern-day 8-5, in
Mexico, there was lots of excitement. My partner, Steve Weinstein,
opened 1♦!
With both vulnerable, I responded 2♣,
game forcing. I figured the opponents might get in our way, and
sure enough, LHO entered with 2♠,
doubled (for penalty) by my partner. RHO passed, and it was up to
me.
Surely, I wasn�t sitting for this one. I
really wanted to know about the minor-suit aces, but there was no
bid to ask for them. (Some advanced readers will be aware of an
animal called �Exclusion
Blackwood� -- whereby you can jump, to say, 5♥, to ask for aces outside of hearts.
Here, that wouldn�t help--I needed �double-exclusion!�)
Anyway, I bided my team by raising to 3♦
to await developments. Partner bid 3♥, presumably showing some heart values. Not much help
there. I continued my stalling process by bidding 4♣. Partner raised to 5♣. This was getting me nowhere. I had no idea if
he held the right cards for me, so I just guessed to bid 6♣, doubled by LHO. This was passed back
to me. I considered running to 6♦, or redoubling, but eventually passed and awaited the
opening lead.
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North
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♠
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J973
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♥
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AKJ4
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♦
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932
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♣
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A4
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South
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♠
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--
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♥
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--
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♦
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kqj85
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♣
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KJ1097652
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The opening lead was the A♠, which I ruffed. How would you play the clubs?
The penalty double was probably based on two aces, not on
queen-third of clubs and an ace. A player with such a trump
holding would do anything but double, for fear of giving away the
trump position. So, if anyone had queen-third of clubs, I thought
it would be RHO. I led the J♣ (you never know when somebody might cover) and LHO showed
out. What is the plan after winning dummy�s A♣? Before finessing East out of his Q♣,
you had better use dummy�s top hearts. Hearts will not break
8-1--this is a safe play. On the high hearts you throw your little
diamonds and take a club finesse and claim for +1540. This was the
full deal:
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Dlr: North
Vul: Both
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North
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♠
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J973
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♥
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AKJ4
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♦
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932
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♣
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A4
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West
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East
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♠
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akq1042
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♠
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865
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♥
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q109
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♥
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876532
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♦
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a1074
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♦
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6
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♣
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--
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♣
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q83
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South
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♠
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--
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♥
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--
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♦
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kqj85
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♣
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KJ1097652
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As you can see, West chose the wrong opening
lead. If he starts with the ♦A
and gives his partner a ruff, he beats the contract. At the other
table, South drove to 6♦
after the 1♦
opener. This was doubled and could have been
down 800 on a spade lead. Sloppy defense beat it only one trick,
but still, our team won 17 IMPs for +1540 and +200, and I had a
deal for my next Favorite 52.
Here is one last strange deal from Mexico,
and a chance to win more than 17 IMPs. In a knockout match, with
both vulnerable, try having a truly enjoyable bridge
experience:
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♠
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Q8654
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♥
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AJ10985
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♦
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A
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♣
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8
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What would you bid as dealer? You should open 1♥.
I know it is tempting to open 1♠
(to avoid reversing), but this is not proper bidding. You should
start with your longer suit and judge later whether or not (and
how) to get spades into the picture.
Your 1♥
opening is doubled and your partner raises to 2♥. RHO bids 2♠.
Your thoughts?
There is no �correct� answer, but I think a jump to 4♥
is best. This contract rates to have play, so there is no reason
to dilly-dally and risk having the opponents get together in a
minor-suit contract. Four hearts is passed back to RHO who
surprises you by bidding 4♠.
I know some people think this way: �The opponents have lots
of spades, my partner is short in spades, therefore I can ruff
spades in dummy and do very well in hearts.� Bad thinking. You
won�t be able to ruff all of those spades, and meanwhile,
those spades will be great on defense. Another way to think of it
is to use the LAW
of Total Tricks (so glad I thought of mentioning it.) Even if
partner is void in spades, they have only 8 trumps. Your
side probably has 9 trumps, a total of 17, indicating 17 tricks.
If you were to bid on to five hearts, contracting for 11 tricks,
that means the opponents would have only 6 tricks their way. With
both sides vulnerable, why try for 650 when you might have 1100?
So, you should double 4♠
(as I did at the table). Everyone passes and it�s your
lead.
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Dummy
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♠
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1092
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♥
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K2
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♦
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KJ98
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♣
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KQ65
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You
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♠
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Q8654
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♥
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AJ10985
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♦
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A
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♣
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8
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With long trumps, your plan should not be to get ruffs.
Instead, you should try to shorten declarer�s trumps.
Accordingly, you lay down the heart ace and see what should be a
disappointing dummy for the declarer. I�m an aggressive takeout
doubler, but I think this North hand is just not enough (change
the ♣5 to the ♠5
and I�d double).
After taking your ♥A
you continue the heart attack and declarer follows with the
queen. He plays the ♠10
off dummy and your partner follows. This is a pleasant
development. You know that you have more trumps than declarer.
Declarer plays low and it is up to you.
There is no reason to withhold your ♠Q. Declarer won�t finesse again because your partner is
showing out on the next round. So, you take your queen and now
what?
You shouldn�t play more hearts yet. Declarer will ruff in
dummy--you�d be giving him a free trick. You already have
control, and the best way to extract the maximum penalty is to
return a trump. Your partner throws an encouraging club and
declarer groans in agony. (At the table, his exact words were, �this
could be expensive�). How expensive?
If you mentally review the first four tricks
(heart ace, heart, spade queen, spade), you should come to
a gratifying conclusion. Declarer started with the heart queen and
the spade ace-king-jack. From the auction, you know your partner
has the club ace. What can declarer do now? If he draws trump,
your side will have the rest. If he plays a diamond, you will win
the ace and play a third round of trumps. Dummy will be out of
trump. You will have the long trumps and running hearts. All
declarer will get is his 3 high trumps. On the Real Deal, declarer
played a club at trick five to partner�s ace. This was the
remaining position:
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Dlr: West
Vul: Both
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Dummy
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♠
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10
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♥
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--
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♦
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KJ98
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♣
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K65
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Larry
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East
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♠
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865
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♠
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♥
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10985
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♥
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7
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♦
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a
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♦
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10743
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♣
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--
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♣
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J74
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South
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♠
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AK
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♥
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--
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♦
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Q652
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♣
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109
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I didn�t want a club ruff. I didn�t want
partner to play a heart (allowing dummy to ruff). I was greedy. I
knew if partner played a diamond, I could win and play a trump.
Declarer would get only his trump ace-king--I had control. �Think
partner--think!� As he was thinking, I knew if he played a
diamond, I would have a defensive claim. Partner, bless him,
worked it out. He played a diamond and I showed my cards. �Playing
a spade, down six,� I said. (This was the top knockout
bracket--and the opponents were good enough players to quickly see
and accept the claim).
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Dlr: West
Vul: Both
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North
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♠
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1092
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♥
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K2
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♦
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KJ98
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♣
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KQ65
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West
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East
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♠
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Q8654
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♠
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3
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♥
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AJ10985
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♥
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763
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♦
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a
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♦
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10743
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♣
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8
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♣
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AJ742
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South
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♠
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AKJ7
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♥
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Q4
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♦
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Q652
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♣
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1093
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Plus 1,700 gave us an 18-imp gain because the player with my hand
at the other able made a surpri
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