North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 03/06/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



Good luck to everyone attending the Spring NABC in New Orleans.


No Scents Policy. Some of our players have reactions to perfume so we ask you to please adhere to the No Scents Policy at the club.


Snacks. Many thanks to the players who are bringing in “goodies” on a regular basis. Everyone is enjoying these extra snacks and we encourage others to join in.


Game Day. Our next game day is Saturday, March 11 at 1 p.m. Bring your favorite game and some friends and let’s play!

 

Andrews Appreciation Game. Saturday, March 25 is a special game honoring the contributions of Pat Andrews, our past president. We will start with a potluck lunch at 11:30, followed by an individual (no partners needed) tournament at 12:15. This is also a SUPER Club Championship game. All proceeds will go to Pat’s favorite group, our club.  Please sign up in advance!


ACBL Tournaments. The next Unit 141 Sectional is March 31 thru April 2 at the King of Prussia Bridge Club. Sign ups in advance are required. Tables are filling up fast! Click on this link for the flyer.


Grand National Teams. Sign up for Championship and C Flights of the Grand National Teams is still open. See our website for details.


Extra Points. The ACBL is now giving extra points for games based on the number of boards played. For example, points for a 24 board game will be increased by a factor of 1.33 and for a 27 board game by 1.5.


March 9: 0-299 game at noon. Please sign up in advance as follows:


  1. Email Pat Andrews at [email protected]
  2. Email the club at [email protected]
  3. Sign up in the book at the club, specifying that you want to play in the 0-299 game

Education



Shuffle and Deal. Tuesday evenings from 7-9 p.m. and Wednesday mornings from 9:30-11:30 a.m. Everyone welcome!


Joann Glasson’s Bridge Lessons. Click here for details regarding March and April classes


Online Bridge Lessons with Lisa Mita. Click here for details regarding Lisa’s Play of the Hand classes beginning March 27.

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



Leaping Michaels. Over 2H or 2S, jumps to the 4 level in a minor suit show game-forcing two suited hands with 5+ cards in the minor bid and 5+ cards in the other major suit.”





From Princeton Standard Defense

by Joann Glasson

Deal of the Week

by John Dickenson






At the recent Hilton Head Island Regional playing in the first round of a KO teams event, I picked up:


♠ AQ2 T8 K52 ♣ A7543


An opening hand by any standards.


My partner, Alison Shoemaker opened 1H in second seat and I bid 2C, game forcing. Over her 2D rebid I bid 2N – no hurry to reach game and giving her room to rebid diamonds if she is 5-5 or 6-5. Imagine my surprise when her next bid to hit the table was 6N!



West led the spade 9 and I paused to count my tricks: 3 spades, 3 hearts, 2 clubs and 2 diamonds. I had some work to do. Where were my extra tricks coming from? Well, if hearts are 3-3 all is good, or if the heart jack is singleton. 3-3 hearts is only a 36% chance and the chance of a singleton jack is infinitesimally small. 3-3 diamonds only gives me one extra trick and I need two. 3-3 clubs is another possibility, yielding 3 spades, 3 hearts, 2 diamonds and 4 clubs. Things look pretty bleak.


Maybe there is a squeeze possibility. In order for a squeeze to operate for 12 tricks I need to lose a trick to rectify the count. I won the spade king in dummy and led a small diamond, intending to duck it. Lo and behold East played the jack! Now there are two possibilities, East either has played the stiff jack, or he holds QJ(x). The principle of restricted choice says he is twice as likely to have played a stiff jack as he was to be holding QJ, so I rose with the K and finessed dummy’s 10 – winning as East showed out. Darn, should have put in the 8!


Now my chances of making this hand have gone up dramatically. I could rattle off hearts from the top hoping for a 3-3 break and claim 13 tricks, and as long as hearts are not worse than 4-2 I can give up a heart and take 12 tricks. But there is another line and it is the one I chose. Given that diamonds were 5-1 with East holding only one, I fear that hearts may be splitting poorly with East having the length. So I chose to lead a low heart from dummy toward my 10 spot and make the hand anytime the heart jack is onside. As the cards lie, this was the winning play. Note I will still make 12 tricks any time hearts are 3-3 or 4-2, but this line also wins when East holds all 6 hearts or 5 hearts and the jack.


Our opponents bid all the way to 3N and took the 10 obvious tricks. Plus 1440 and minus 630 was worth 13 IMPs.


Here is the complete deal:


Laughter is the Best Medicine



A club is led against a 7D contract and declarer has four clubs to the jack. His partner, the dummy, says: "I have some good and some bad news for you. The good news is that I am void in clubs, the bad news is that I am also void in diamonds."





Bridge humor from

Eddie Kantar

Wed, Feb 22

75%

Dave Dresher & Edward Leach


March Birthdays



Bailey, Beth

Davis, Joe

Dennis, O'Brien

Fair, Nancy

Fisher, Renata

Flicker, Allen

Fradette, Réal

Gordon, Barbara

Horning, Robert

Jon, Clemens

Kaufman, Andy

Peoples, Barbara

Perchonock, Carl

Petkun, William

Susan, Hurgunow

Uhlenburg, April

Yanoff, Marcia

Zacchei, Tony

North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
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