Greetings to the
North Penn Bridge Community!
Week of 01/31/2022
From the Club Manager
Dave Dodgson


Congratulations to the following players who placed in the overalls for the Royal STaC:

  • Monday: Daniel Jacobson and David Cohan finished 6th overall;
  • Wednesday: John Dickenson and Mitch Snyder finished 12th overall and Dave Dresher and Ed Leach finished 20th overall;
  • Thursday: Gail Kirrstetter and Ed Leach finished 21st overall;
  • Friday: our team game is not compared to masterpoint games.
 
0-199er Nite Club Game. A new 0-199er Nite Club Game will soon be available for those of you who have been participating in the 0-99er Nite Club Game and want to move up to the next level. It should be announced in the next few weeks.

February Events:

February is Education Fund month…Extra Points all month! 

February 7-11 – STaC week.

Thursday February 10 – Bobbie Gomer Club Challenge. Yorktown Bridge Club will be hosting the first of several local interclub competitions honoring the great bridge teacher, Bobbie Gomer, who passed away in 2020. Here is your chance to represent North Penn against other clubs in the area -Yorktown, King of Prussia, AMI and Hamilton. It’s a team game, 8 is enough format. See the details regarding stratifications and time on our webpage. If you can put together a team or just want to play, please send an email to: [email protected]

February 12 – 4 pm Robot Individual. Be sure to mark your calendar for this unique, fast, and fun online North Penn tourney. It will be our “Valentine’s Happy Hour with the Robots Game❤.” The last Robot Individual had 16 tables…a new record!

February 14-18 – Club Championship Week.

Proof of vaccination and face masks will remain a requirement at our F2F games until further notice.

Calendar (click here to see a file you can enlarge):
Education


Shuffle and Deal Wednesday, February 2 at 9:30 am. Shuffle and deal is on! Open to people at any level who want to ask questions as they play.

Deb is looking for volunteers to assist her in mentoring these up and coming players. There is a schedule on the whiteboard at the club so please sign up. 

Condolences




George Webber, a long time member of the club,
died January 24 at the age of 94.

His obituary can be found here.
Coming Soon - GNT

Click here to view the
District 4 GNT event email.


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


“Keep one goal in mind: DEFEATING THE CONTRACT. Do not worry about overtricks unless you are defending a doubled contract or are playing tournament bridge.

A player who hesitates during the bidding is likely to have a problem hand. If that player becomes the declarer, keep the hesitation in mind.”



From Defensive Tips
by Edwin B. Kantar
Deal of the Week
by Rex Saffer



Let's Have a Heart to Heart


Dear Reader, it has been five weeks since our last contribution to the Deal of the Week, just as 2021 was coming to a close. We wish you all a heartfelt Happy New Year!

Several local clubs reopened in the latter half of last year for face–to-face (F2F) play, but it has been a tough go for some. Table counts are down over ongoing concerns about the seemingly interminable pandemic, as well as the evident popularity of online play. Regional tournaments have been particularly hard–hit. Support your local clubs and tournaments F2F if you are willing and able, and the beloved game we somewhat distantly recall from pre–pandemic times may yet survive, even thrive. Wouldn’t that be so heartening?

The Deal

In a recent F2F game at a local club, players fanned their hands to find:


There were seven full tables in play, awkward in terms of the movement. Seven rounds of three boards each would amount to only 21 boards, while six rounds of four provide 24 boards to play, but pairs play only six of seven possible opponents. The ungainly solution adopted here was a “Pivot Mitchell”, where E/W pairs arriving at Table 7 pivot to N/S after the round and play a second round there before moving on to Table 1 to resume play E/W. To further confuse everyone in the room, in the last two rounds some but not all tables pivot the cardinal directions, so that E/W become N/S and vice versa. It’s a single winner game, and scoring errors are not infrequent.

The Deal in the Field

At any rate, out of seven plays of this board, E/W declared four times: 2♣ making three, 2NT making four, 3NT making three, and 5♣ down one. N/S declared three times, one in 3 down two undoubled for –100, one in 2 down three doubled for –500, and at our table, 3 down four doubled for –800. The double dummy optimal score for E/W is 3NT making four for +630.

The Auction

We have no record of the other auctions as we would in an online game, but the contracts and scores indicate that both the auctions and the play of the hand were lively and heartily volatile. The first issue is whether to open the 10 HCP East hand, which falls just shy of a “Rule of 20+2” opener. Add your HCP to the combined length of your two longest suits. If that sums to at least 20 and you have two quick tricks, open. As a general rule, we aren’t fond of Rules and prefer thoughtful, informed decision–making. For better or worse, we would have opened the East hand 1♠ in a heartbeat. After South’s presumed Pass, most Wests might just jump to 3NT.

Other Easts might decline to open, and assuming South isn’t feeling frisky, West would likely open 1♣, opening the door for North to compete in diamonds. After East’s spade response, E/W should do their best to get to 3NT. Against any defense declarer can bring home ten tricks.

We like an opening 1♠ by East for another reason: A jump to 3NT by West slams the door on any possible competition by N/S, and it also conceals any information about the West hand that North might use to inform the opening lead. This amounts to analysis by result, but hey.

At our table, South is not at all unfrisky and makes an adventuresome, obstructive 3 jump overcall. West could have bitten the bullet and bid 3NT but instead passes. Whatever for? Perhaps hoping for a big hand in the East and slam prospects? Fearing a diamond assault in notrump? Regardless, with some trepidation East reopens with a Double, and there you have it. West leads the ♠K.

The Play

E/W must set the contract four tricks to beat +630 for ten tricks in notrump their way. Click here to see the defense do so. After the opening lead, West continues the ♠2. East wins the jack and continues the ♠A. West discards the ♣4, upside down and encouraging. With the AK in dummy, the defense must try to cash two club tricks before one of them goes away. After doing so, the defense exits with a club. South does her best by shortening herself in trumps and leading toward the J in dummy, but it is not to be. At trick eleven, South is thrown in, and West must win one of the last two tricks. What a heartwarming outcome for the defense!

Closing Thoughts

One of Eddie Kantar’s maxims is, “She who knows, goes.” We strongly prefer that West not pass South’s jump overcall when it is virtually certain that a vulnerable game is in hand, so to speak. Might there have been slam prospects? Perhaps, but competitive bidding – even South’s daring jump overcall at our table – is all about interfering with the opponents so that they do not conduct an unobstructed auction. If we allow the opponents to do so, more often than not they will find a good contract and score well. The corollary, of course, is that we will not.

On the other hand, there is a fine line between daring and reckless, between going out in a blaze of glory and going down in flames. Should we do everything we can safely do to obstruct the opponents’ auction? By all means! But while we may profit in the long run, in the short term there are bound to be occasional catastrophic outcomes. We do not fear them, provided we stay on the right side of the statistical fence.

Defense is hard enough without making it necessary to defeat a contract four tricks to turn a profit. 3NT making four for +630 would have been a cold top worth 6 matchpoints anyway, as the only other pair in that game took just nine tricks. Setting 3doubled only three tricks for –500 would have been worth only 4.5 matchpoints. On such slim margins are games sometimes won and lost.

All the best,
Rex
Laughter is the Best Medicine



Your play was much better tonight and so were your excuses.
72%
70%
David Dresher & Mitchell Snyder
John Dickenson & David Cohan

February Birthdays


Bassman, Pat
Bishop, Carole
Cutler, Betsy
Davis, Joseph
Grossman, Barbara
Lebow, Anita
Parke, Nancy
Schaffel, Rona
Shinberg, Barry
Watters, Elaine
North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
(215) 699-4932