Author: Larry Cohen
Date of publish: 8/29/2012
Level: Intermediate to Advanced
Results for Set 43
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#1) South deals, E-W Vul. [South opens 1NT 15-17]
A 8 4 3 A K J 10 8 7 5 2 -- 4 | 6 9 4 3 K 9 8 5 2 A 8 7 2 |
Deal 1 Scores:
6
:10
7
:9
5
:5
3
:1
This deal comes from my pro days when the (weak) team sponsor overcalled 1NT with 2
and played there. Her professional partner almost had a heart attack when declarer showed out on the 2nd round of clubs and then the first round of diamonds! She took all 13 tricks (ruffing 3 spades in dummy). I can't see West doing more than overcalling 4
, over which it is maybe possible East could make a move towards 6.
#2) South deals, Nobody Vul. [South opens 1
, North bids 2
if possible]
A A 4 K Q J 6 5 3 A Q J 3 | 10 4 2 10 5 3 A 10 9 8 6 5 2 |
Deal 2 Scores:
5
:10
5
:9
7NT:8
7
:7
6
:7
6
:6
6NT:5
3NT:5
7
:4
4NT:4
5NT:3
That's a lot of scores. After a heart lead, the notrump contracts have 9 or 13 tricks. In a minor-suit contract, declarer has much better control. The best grand slam is in notrump where declarer can use two diamond entries to take two club finesses. After 1
, West starts with a double and then must decided what to do when 2
comes back to him. He is probably too heavy for 3
, so will likely choose between another double, 3
, or just jumping to 5
. This is a crazy deal!
#3) South deals, N-S Vulnerable [South opens 1
]
A 6 5 K 10 4 2 A Q 7 2 K 4 | Q J 9 4 2 3 K 10 9 3 A Q 3 |
Deal 3 Scores:
6
:10
4
:7
3NT:6
5
:4
With the
A and
K likely onside, the diamond slam is excellent. How about this auction to get here:
(1
) 1NT - 2
- 2
- 3
- 3
- 4
- 6
. East's 4
tells West what he might need to consider the bold 6
bid. In fact, this is the auction I had with David Berkowitz on this deal from a Nebraska Regional and we made 920.
#4) West deals, Nobody Vul. [South bids spades, North raises to 4
if possible]
A K K J 7 6 K Q 9 8 7 6 2 | Q 3 A Q J 8 7 6 4 3 A J 10 |
Deal 4 Scores:
6
:10
6
:9
5
:7
5
:5
4
X:2
East is too strong to respond 4
to 1
. After South's 1
overcall, West can reverse into diamonds or repeat the clubs (presumably with a jump to 3
). When North bids 4
, East has a tough problem. If partner had jumped to 3
, East might just take a chance that there aren't two fast spade losers and jump to the club slam. It is hard to see reaching a heart slam when the opponents take up all the room.
***Full Book by Larry Cohen with Bidding Practice and results/analysis.***