North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 01/09/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



January is Junior Fund Month. The Junior Fund benefits bridge activities for junior players. All games will have an additional $1 charge and provide extra points. The online games this week will also be Junior Fund games.

 

North Penn Board of Directors. Congratulations to our new board members, Elaine Clair and Dennis O’Brien. Congratulations to Mike Carver re-elected Vice-President, Brendan O’Malley re-elected Secretary and Beth Milton re-elected Treasurer.


January 12 - Pro/Am Game.


January 14 - Robot Individual - 4 p.m.


January 21 Special Event Saturday. Game Day at North Penn Bridge Club from 1-4 p.m. featuring Euro style board games such as Settlers of Catan, Alhambra and Railroad Games. These games emphasize strategy, downplay luck and conflict. They tend towards economic rather than military themes. Please contact Beth Milton at [email protected] with questions or suggestions. Learn something new and bring a friend!

Education



Joann Glasson’s Bridge Lessons. Resuming on Monday January 16. Click on this link for the details.


Advanced Beginner Lessons start January 17th. This class will run for five consecutive Tuesday nights from 7-9 p.m. The lessons are geared toward the students who took the beginner class in the fall. We will cover Stayman, transfers, and the takeout double. The cost for the five classes is $100 per person. Shuffle and Deal will continue on Tuesdays leading up to the class. Click this link for the flyer.


You need not have taken the Fall class to attend. ALL ARE WELCOME!!

Partnership



To add your name to the player list or to request a partner for a game, please send an email to [email protected].

Calendar


Click here to see a file you can enlarge.



We update our Facebook page regularly so be sure to check it out. It’s a great way to stay in touch with all the happenings at North Penn.

Tidbits



“When there is an honor in dummy and you have a HIGHER honor tend to conserve your honor if dummy plays low. However, if you don’t play your honor, the card you play must be the equivalent of the nine or higher; if it isn’t, play your honor.”




From Defensive Tips

by Edwin B. Kantar

Deal of the Week

by Bruce Schwaidelson




Do You Play "Gambling 6D?"



You are West in 1st seat, red v. white, and pick up the following:

----------K10 -- AKQJ10976 AQ4


It looks like you don’t need much from partner for a reasonable 6 slam. Give her nothing but the ♣K, and the slam is no worse than 50-50 (♠A onside or ♠A led). If pard has ♣KJxx or even Kxxxx, 6 could be a laydown. Of course if you add the ♠A to the ♣K, you have a cold 7 grand; with only the ♣K and ♠Q, 6 is ice cold too. The small slam will also succeed if pard has ♣K and A or how about a 3-pointer that includes ♠QJ10x plus 8x.


To protect your black-suit holdings, however, it would be much better to be declarer rather than dummy. It occurred to me that opening “Gambling 6 Diamonds” is not out of the question. Even if pard doesn’t hold the right Ace or King, the slam could still be odds-on, or you just might get a helpful opening lead.


Chester A. Riley, Jr., sitting West, got pretty darn excited when he held this hand at a recent F2F game at North Penn. Perhaps you remember his Dad. The 1950’s TV sitcom was called “Life of Riley” and William Bendix played the senior Chester A. Riley. I really loved that show, though I might not be willing to admit I was old enough to enjoy it.


“Junior” opened 2♣ without hesitation and his wife not surprisingly responded 2, played as waiting. When it dawned on Junior that a diamond contract would make his wife declarer, he muttered to himself his TV Dad’s famous tag line: “What a revolting development this is.” Once their auction revealed that Junior had a great diamond suit and his wife likely held the AK, he decided to place the contract in 6NT from his side rather than wrong-siding 6 - praying he would find an entry to dummy. He was not the only one to bid 6NT for that reason.


The opening lead was North’s 9 and here was the layout:


When Dummy appeared, Junior knew he had right-sided their NT contract, but when he saw the all-important 8 across the table, he realized 6 from his side could not be beaten. After winning the A and throwing a club from his hand, he faced the question of the day: should he play for the ♣K onside or maybe the ♠Q or ♠A onside? The correct guess (assuming there was one) would give him 8 diamonds, 2 hearts, and 2 black tricks.


Unfortunately for our declarer, it occurred to him that a losing club hook would mean there was no way to make the contract, whereas a losing spade play could give him a 2nd bite of the apple. Suppose he immediately played a spade to his King losing to the Ace (or the 10 losing to the Queen). If North didn’t hold both missing spade honors he might not return the suit. If North led a club, Declarer could claim; if instead he played a red card (most likely another heart), Declarer would be able to pitch his remaining spade on the high heart and try the club finesse. If it won, he would be home free.


As we can see, the spade play did not go well and down 1 was immediate. When Junior discovered that the ♣K was in fact onside, his temper was a whole lot less in check. This time he bellowed “What a revolting development this is!” Adding insult to injury, his wife pointed out that “if you would only agree to play control responses to 2♣ openers, dear, we could have been in 6 from your side.” Junior was not a big fan of that method (nor am I), but on this deal the bid showing an Ace and a King (usually 2♠) would have avoided the 2 response.


By contrast, when Alison Wonderland picked up this beautiful hand, she decided to take a few moments before bidding. In her youth she was the recipient of a treasure trove of bridge knowledge from her marvelous mentors, the Queen of Hearts and the Queen of Diamonds. The Queen of Hearts may be known for shouting “Off with his head!” or “Off with her head!” but for “Alice” - as she liked to be called - the Queen was best known for advising: “Plan Ahead, Alice! Plan Ahead!” which in bridge-speak included thinking about the rest of the auction before making your first call.


The Queen of Diamonds, not to be outdone, loved to warn Alice: “When you have a great hand that includes a long powerful diamond suit, especially if it includes ME, think long and hard about opening 1, rather than 2♣, if you want to be declarer!”


Heeding those words of wisdom, Alice did start with 1 and this bidding sequence followed:


Alice-----Partner

-----------------------------1---------.1

-----------------------------3♣---------3

-----------------------------3♠--------..3NT

-----------------------------4♣---------4

-----------------------------6---------.P


The 3♣ bid is game forcing, although one of my partners likes to call it a “fake jump shift.” Opener has no desire to play in clubs (if clubs are raised she will bid diamonds again), but this is a great way to force to game and learn more about responder’s hand. East could have bid 3NT over 3♣, as some did, but Alice’s partner was one of the Tweedle twins (she’s never certain if she’s playing with Dee or Dum), and whoever-he-was decided to go slow with a 3 preference. He believed he had a nice hand in support of diamonds but also knew it could also be suitable for NT. He was happy to let Alice determine the correct course.


Alice’s next bid (3♠) is especially interesting - and intentionally ambiguous. When a minor has been agreed but 3NT is still in play, the first priority is to land there if possible. Thus, 3♠ is presumably asking for help in that suit, with opener envisioning 9+ tricks if spades are stopped - but stay tuned.


Tweedle hoped his J763 spade holding was good enough for 3NT, so he bid it, and Alice’s 4 call followed. Attention, Attention, Gerber lovers: the 4♣ bid is NOT Gerber! When opener took further action over 3NT, she was sending a message to Tweedle: 3♠ was in fact a control bid (A,K, singleton or void), partner, and so is 4♣, which means “I am contemplating a diamond slam.” Tweedle cooperated with a 4 control bid and Alice took stock by peering through the looking-glass.


Alice knew her partner had the A and/or the K plus something in spades (hopefully the ♠A or Q). Then, too, Tweedle didn’t merely sign off in 5 (fast arrival) over her 4♣ bid, so he must like his hand somewhat. The big question: could she be certain of an entry to dummy or might the opening lead be helpful enough to ensure 12 tricks? If only RKC had been invented to locate the trump 8, she thought, as she felt confident that 6 would have good play if indeed Tweedle held that all-important card. It was high time for her to bid “Gambling 6,” played from the proper side.


The opening lead was the 9 and Alice jumped for joy (metaphorically) when dummy appeared. Her slam was a laydown and she knew exactly what to do. Just for fun she played the J, hoping the Queen of Hearts would magically appear. When she did, Alice of course ruffed her with the Queen of Diamonds, honoring both mentors simultaneously. Next she cashed the King of Diamonds, since she knew him too, and led the “beer card” (the7) to Tweedle-dummy’s 8. Now came another acquaintance, the King of Hearts, followed by the A, while Alice pitched the King of Spades along with the ♠10.


The contract assured, she was able to play for an overtrick by finessing the Queen of Clubs. When that Queen held, she cashed the ♣A, ruffed her club loser in dummy and claimed all 13 tricks. Notice that 6 Diamonds played by West could not be beaten regardless of the lead because of the 8 entry in dummy. In fact, if the opponents don’t take their ♠A at trick one, 13 tricks are assured since the King of Clubs is onside. If the ♠A had been played at trick 1, Alice would have simply pitched 2 clubs on the AK and claimed. On the other hand, 6 East is down immediately on a spade lead. At least Chester A. Riley, Jr., got that part right.


Postmortem: After the game several club members discussed how best to get to the diamond slam with West as declarer, and I think I liked Alice’s bidding plan as much as any. While you can’t bid the slam with total certainty, it is critical that it be played from the West-side. If you are unwilling to open “Gambling 6 Diamonds,” the Queen of Hearts - and Alice – would urge you to:


Laughter is the Best Medicine



Patrick Jourdain, a famous bridge player-teacher from Wales is called over to a table at one of his classes where a hand has just passed out, but 4th hand had 17 high card points. "So why did you pass?" asks Patrick. "Because you told us after three passes the bidding is over, so I had to pass."




Bridge humor from

Eddie Kantar

Fri, Dec 20

70%

Constance Abel & Christina Dowling


A scoring change occurred for the December 30 game resulting in a 70% result for Chris Dowling and Connie Abel. Congratulations!


January Birthdays



Blickman, Linda

Bresler, Gina

Clemens, Jon

Dougherty, Lauren

Drake, Lucille

Goldsman, Ronald

Harrington, Jeanne

Hurgunow, Susan

Leach, Edward

McGready, Mary

Mita, Lisa

Morse, Susan

O'Brien, Dennis

O'Connor, Priscilla

Roden, Carol

Sgro, Christine

Tyson, Nancy

Young, Winnie

North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
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