A B I G N U M B E R I N N A
S H V I L L E
by Larry Cohen
In a Spingold match in Nashville (2007), I held:
| A K 3 | |
| A K | |
| K Q J 9 6 | |
| A 10 4 |
With neither side vulnerable, I was dealt this monstrous hand. Fortunately, I was playing with my regular partner, David Berkowitz, so I was able to open a Precision Club.
Opponents love to interfere against Precision. Usually, I
find that low-level (1- or 2-level) interference actually helps us! It
gives us the ability to make takeout- or card-showing doubles and also helps us
place the cards during the play. My LHO interfered by jumping to 2
,
alerted.
David (who incidentally wrote an excellent book called Precision Today) asked for the meaning and was told: "diamonds and a major."
Hmmm. David doubled to show "cards." This meant he probably had about 5-8 HCP with any distribution. (With more, he'd have bid a 5-card suit, or notrump). My RHO passed, apparently willing to play in diamonds.
I was also willing. I passed and LHO passed! The
final contract was 2
X!!
| Larry | LHO | David | RHO |
| 1 |
2 |
Double*** | Pass |
| Pass | Pass | ||
| *=Precision; **=D+Maj; ***=5-8 HCP | |||
It was Christmas in July. David led a trump and the full deal was:
| Vul: None | |||
| Dlr: East | |||
Declarer won the diamond lead and played the
Q.
I won and drew a few rounds of trumps, followed by ace, king, and another spade.
David took his spades (I threw a low club) and all declarer could get were his 2
natural diamond tricks. Down 6, 1400. At the other table, East-West did well to
avoid reaching a slam. They proudly read off "plus 460" to their
teammates, and were dismayed to learn that this was a LOSS of 14 IMPs
against 1400.