Greetings to the
North Penn Bridge Community!
Week of 03/28/2022
From the Club Manager
Dave Dodgson


ACBL Live for Clubs. The ACBL is having software problems. As a result, games may take some time to upload.
 
Charity for Ukraine. The ACBL has added charity games to benefit Ukraine. Our Tuesday night game is now a charity game, and the ACBL Charity games in April will also benefit Ukraine.
 
Super Club Championships. All games during the final week of March will award triple normal points. Don’t miss this great opportunity!

March 30 – 9:30-11:30 am. Shuffle & Deal with Deb Crisfield

Bobbi Gomer Club Challenge. Congratulations to Dave Dodgson, Dave Dresher, John Dickenson, and Ellen Luchette for their first place win in this team game on Sunday. Our team did not qualify for the trophy because we didn’t meet the two team requirement. Let’s aim for more teams next time!

Although we are no longer requiring masks, we ask that all be mindful of the health concerns of others and show courtesy and respect for fellow players while at the table.
Calendar

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Education



Two more beginners needed for the Spring Bridge Classes with Deb Crisfield starting Thursday, April 21 and running through June 9.

Please talk to your friends about giving it a try. The first three classes are free, so there’s no obligation to stay if they don't like it.

Recruitment is the key to growing and sustaining our club.
Recognition



March ACBL Rank Achievements:

-----Ellie Goldman -- Diamond Life Master
-----Belle Miller -- NABC Master



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


“Be prepared to rescue partner once but not twice. When searching for a decent part-score, you often have little space in which to maneuver because the partnership strength may be quite limited and you want to bail out as early as possible.”




From 100 Winning Bridge Tips
by Ron Klinger
Deal of the Week
by Mitch Snyder



Here's a Hand


Here’s a hand from a recent game that offers an opportunity for a great matchpoint score. It features a slam that is tough to bid and more importantly requires top notch declarer play to bring it home. If you find yourself in an aggressive contract you probably don’t need an overtrick for a good result. On the other hand, going down will likely be close to bottom.


The auction:

Peter Pan was North and Captain Hook was sitting opposite. They got to 6S by South in a very questionable auction, not disclosed here.

Here are 2 possible auctions that end in slam. The auction through 2S is straightforward but opener’s 3rd bid is not. Current expert thinking is that in game forcing auctions like this one, bids below 3 of the agreed suit are ‘patterning out’. Control bids would begin above 3 of the agreed suit.

N----E----S----W

------P----1S---P
2D---P----2H--.P
2S---P----3D--.P
4C---P----4H--.P
4N--.P----5S--.P
6S--.P----.P----P
N----E----S----W

------P----1S---P
2D---P----2H--.P
2S---P----3C---P
3D---P----3H--.P
4C---P----4S---P
5C---P----6S

In the first auction the 3D bid is likely showing a 5431 shape, although 6430 and 5440 are possible. The next two bids show controls. North’s 4C not only shows a control but also the willingness to explore for slam. 4H denies a diamond control but South feels safe to show the unguarded King if Hearts as it is protected on the opening lead in a spade contract. After a keycard sequence North reasons that if South has the (stiff) Ace of Clubs he can pitch 2 diamonds on the KQ of Clubs and try to ruff out the King of Diamonds. (North knows the opponents have 4 or fewer diamonds between them because South showed 3 or 4). If South doesn’t have a club Ace, then the slam is on a Diamond finesse. All in all, there are 2 ways to make it, a little more than a 50% chance, not a great slam but North went anyway.

In the second auction, the 3C bid was a control. No patterning out for this pair. The next 3 bids were controls but with nothing else to say South quietly bid 4S. North made one more slam try with 5C and South, using the same logic as above took the plunge.

The play:

On a diamond lead, Captain Hook saw the possibility of making seven if the Diamond finesse was on. True to his moniker he called for a low diamond from dummy. East quickly set the contract.

On a diamond lead you cannot afford to take the finesse because if it fails and it likely will, you could be down after only 2 tricks.

Before you play to trick one you look over the hand for a line that might work without the diamond finesse. You note the juicy KQ7 of clubs in dummy where you can pitch 2 diamonds and then try to ruff out the king and run the diamonds for heart pitches. This works if diamonds are 2-2 and spades are 3-2. This is exactly the line North pictured when he went to 6.

Note that you have 2 trump entries if you preserve the 8 to be overtaken by the 9. Actually, I would use that entry before the king to avoid a careless error.

Another line is to lead a heart towards hand after disposing of your diamonds on the clubs. This fails even if East has the Ace. A trump return will prevent you from ruffing two Hearts. Remember you used one (the 9) to get to the board. If West has the Ace of Hearts there is no play.

Back to the diamonds. Remember that West is very unlikely to have the king, so a ruffing finesse might work. But if West led a singleton, he’d ruff the 2nd diamond. So, once again this line easily works if diamonds are 2-2, but there is a way to improve your chances. In case West has only 2 trumps, you can cash one trump in hand before entering dummy to cash the clubs and take the ruffing finesse. This works with 3-1 diamonds too, as long as West only has 2 spades.

Since diamonds and spades both break friendly, your excellent declarer play is rewarded with an overtrick!

Bidding and making the slam scored 98% in the common game. This hand also rewarded good dummy play as making 680 or 710 was worth over 95% of the matchpoints.

After the contract went down, Peter vowed to ‘neverland’ Captain Hook as a partner again.
Laughter is the Best Medicine



Teacher gives lesson on Keycard Blackwood using 1430 responses and says a 5C response shows 1 or 4 keycards. Student thinks he hears "one through four keycards" and responds 5C every time partner bids 4NT!
70%
Carl Perchonock & Barry Dehlin

March Birthdays


Bickman, Bonnie
Flicker, Allen
Foderaro, Janet
Fradette, Real
Friedenberg, Elaine
Gordon, Barbara
Horning, Robert
Kaufman, Andy
Luchette, Ellen
Notgarnie, Benson
Peoples, Barbara
Perchonock, Carl
Petkum, William
Sherman, Jane
Uhlenburg, April
Zacchei, Tony

North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
(215) 699-4932