Author: Larry Cohen
Date of publish: 8/31/2015
Level: Intermediate to Advanced
Results for Set 6
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#1) East deals, neither side vulnerable
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Scores for Board 1:
3:10
4:9
5: 7
2NT: 6
3NT: 3
What should East open? My preference is 1 so that I am prepared to bid 2
next (lying slightly about the minor-suit lengths). The alternative of opening 1
and telling some other lie with my rebid is less appealing. After 1
-1
-2
, I expect West would bid 2NT and East would pass or raise to 3NT. After a 1
-1
start, I suppose East would lie with 2
or 1NT. None of these auctions seem headed towards diamonds. Yes, it could start: 1
-1
-2
-3
. No game is good, thus the scoring as shown.
#2) West deals, neither side vulnerable
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Deal 2 Scores:
7:10
6: 8
6: 5
5: 3
5: 2
3NT: 2
7: 1
After 1-1
, I suspect most Wests would choose 2NT. No, this usually doesn't contain a singleton, but at least the singleton is the king and in partner's suit. The 2NT rebid gets the 19 HCP off opener's chest and feels more descriptive than a huge underbid of 2
(or misleading 3
). After 2NT, East can bid 3
, forcing. West can bid 3
(where he lives) and East might bid only 4
next. Still, West should head towards slam with his great red-suit cards. He will rightfully be concerned about a club control. Maybe it goes: 1
-1
-2N-3
-3
-4
-4
-5
... that leads to at least a small slam. Kudos to any pair who reached 7
. Nobody said these deals were easy.
#3) East deals, North-South Vulnerable, South bids 3
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Deal 3 Scores:
6NT: 10
6: 8
6: 7
6: 5
5NT: 5
5: 4
5: 3
7: 2
5: 1
Assuming 2 spade tricks (likely), 6NT requires declarer to win either a diamond or club finesse for 12 tricks (at least 75%, probably more on the auction). Other slams are also decent propositions. After 1 (3
), I think it is more practical for West to try 3NT as opposed to a negative double. East now has many options: Pass, 4
, 4NT (Quantitative), or 5NT (Pick-a-Slam). Since Pass and 5NT are at opposite extremes, I like the middle courses (4
or 4NT). West might upgrade his great spots and treat the
AQ as
AK to accept an invitation.
#4) South opens 1, Both vulnerable, North bids 3
(weak)
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Board 4 Scores:
4: 10
3: 8
4: 7
5: 5
Slams: 1
After South's 1, West is too strong to overcall 2
, so he should double. The preemptive 3
comes back to West, who should double again. East might bid only 3
and buy it there. He could make a bigger bid (maybe 4
) which could lead to 5
(which needs a fair amount of luck). No game is great--and nothing is clear. So, why is this deal included? It comes (as do most of these) from the Becker Archives--maybe Mr. Becker knows something I don't know.
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