Posted 2011-April-26, 18:59
All these hands are from the two-session, 6-rounder on Friday and Saturday. Our first opponents were another C team. We were kind of sloppy, and got a high-scoring narrow win. Our next two opponents were national-class A teams.
(1) This hand came up against the 'Enfield' team. I was South, and fleetingly considered passing 4♣. Ludicrous, to be sure, but it would have been best here. I tried 4♦, and partner raised to 5♦ with ♠ --- ♥AJ ♦J8xxxx ♣AQ7xx. RHO, looking at 3-1-4-5 distribution including ♦A109x and ♣KJ98x, unleashed the axe, and we went down 1100. At the other table, my teammate overcalled 2♣ over 1♦ with RHO's hand, playing it right there, and going down 400. LHO's hand, which had 5-7-1-0 distribution, passed the first round at both tables, electing not to risk burying the spade suit. These are the kind of hands, evidently, that separate the men from the boys.
(2) This hand came up against a team featuring Billy Milner. Partner faced this problem, passed the first time and in response to my double, jumped to 3♥. Yes, 3♥. Maybe he thought for a second it was matchpoints, or didn't want to contract for a game needing 11 tricks, or didn't want to risk my dummy coming down with poor diamond support, or wanted to throw off the opponents during the play. At any rate, RHO rebid 3♠, I raised to 4♥ with ♠Jx ♥AJx ♦AQ8x ♣AJxx, and LHO, Milner, drove on to 4♠ with ♠Qx ♥xxx ♦xx ♣Q98xxx. I doubled, and all passed.
I led the ♥A, after which there was no chance of setting 4♠, but my second choice, a trump, wouldn't have worked too well either: RHO would have drawn trumps and led the ♣K, and I would have had to find a duck without knowing anything about the side-suit distribution; then, when RHO put me in with the third club, I would have to guess which red suit to break, dangerously misguided by partner's bidding. It shouldn't have mattered, since 5♦ is cold our way. At the other table, our teammates were -150 (defending a partial in diamonds). While we would have swung 24 IMPs by making 5♦, we were blitzed with double-digit IMPs to spare, so this hand alone could only have gotten us a VP or two in the grand scheme of things.
(3) This hand also came up against the Enfield team. I chose to jump to 3♥. The good news is that we weren't overrun by enemy spade bids. The bad news is that I played it there, and dummy provided me ♠AJxxx ♥xx ♦K9xx ♣Qx. Ten tricks rolled in on the 2-2 trump break. They didn't get to game at the other table either, but in this match, too, we were blitzed with double-digit IMPs to spare, so this hand alone wouldn't have done anything for us.
In the weekend Swiss it felt like we were up against a far tougher field, plus my partner and one of our teammates were running on fumes, as they had played in the GNT in Dana Point the previous weekend, and had pulled out a grueling final match by 1 IMP. It did seem like my partner was playing through a letdown. We didn't finish in contention for any sort of award. Still, the experience playing against national-class competition can only help us going forward.