-400 hurts. Continue reading
Board #5 did us in at the Simsbury Bridge Club on the night of the big party, November 20, 2013. I sat north and dealt; we were vulnerable. I had a hand that was just barely worth opening.
The good thing about her interference was that it removed most of the likelihood that I would find myself declaring a club contract. What I hoped for was a double from partner. It did not happen.
My partner faced a difficult decision. Normally, he would not consider bidding a new suit with only seven points, but these sparkling diamonds dazzled him:
RHO passed. I expected my partner to have ten or so points and a very good diamond suit. There was not much left for him in hearts or spades. I therefore figured him for either a super-solid diamond suit or a stopper in clubs. In either case 3NT looked feasible, and that is what I bid. My ace (and king and jack) in the hole was the fact that my strength was in the unbid suit.
LHO led ♠K. I said a little prayer that she would not switch to a club and held up my ace. As I hoped, she switched to a low heart. I should have played the ♥A to encourage a second heart lead, but I selected the jack instead.
I only had three top tricks outside of diamonds, so there was no avoiding the diamond finesse. I rated it as no better than a 10 percent chance. Sure enough, on trick number three RHO captured my ten with her king. If she had held three diamonds and held up for one round, I would have already been beaten. Now it depended on what she decided to lead.
Unfortunately for us, she picked the only card that would beat the contract, the ♣A, which dropped her partner’s singleton king, thereby clearing the way for six more club tricks. Of course, if LHO had held the ♦K instead of the ♣K, I would have been a hero, and we would have won the event. If RHO had led any other club, LHO would have won the king, and a lead from any other suit assures the contract (and an overtrick).
In the post mortem I wondered aloud how the bidding should have gone. Should partner have passed? Should I have passed on the second round with my minimum opener? I searched the Internet for guidance, and I found . . . nothing. I could not find a single article that provided guidelines for how to deal with a weak jump overcall by the opponents.
I think that I deserved most of the blame. If partner had held a game-going hand, he could have bid 3♠. I probably should have taken his bid as invitational and passed. 3♦ was our best spot.
Wow, what a effort. But I forgot who I am talking about.
for the above hand, I think you are just stuck!! I would always open and AAK 12 point hand with the doubleton. And your partner is not a passed hand, so I do not think you can pass. You make the only bid you can, 3NT, but I believe your partner knows he has misled you a bit, and I think he has to bid 4D, which you now have to pass! That is my opinion for whatever it is worth.
Now I have not looked at the other posting for Mary’s LM party. Perhaps I should, to get me ready for Wednesday.
Have a great weekend.
Jerry
Had another thought. Might this be a good question for Jerry Helms in the Bridge Bulletin. Even if it is not a good topic for him, the trying may be as much fun