North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 06/12/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



Attention 0-299 and 0-500 Players! Please sign up in advance. You will be notified if there are enough players for a game.


The Longest Day - June 21.


For the 4th year in a row, NPDBC has exceeded its $1,600 goal in fundraising for The Longest Day! To date, $2,115 has been donated by our players to the Alzheimer’s Association. Let’s keep going!! In 2022, we raised $2,500...let’s see if we can go even higher! Thanks to all who have so generously supported our fundraising efforts for this worthy cause. Please be sure to sign up. Here’s the schedule:


9:30 a.m.----0-50 game

11:30 a.m.--..LUNCH (yes, there will be cake!)

Noon--------Open game


Click here to give.

Robot Individual - June 24. This will also be a Longest Day game.


Royal STaC June 12-16. This is one of the few opportunities to win gold points at the club level. Red and silver points will also be awarded.


King of Prussia Regional. It’s time to make your plans for the regional at the end of the month. There are events for all levels from 199er games on up. This is our local regional and needs our support. A schedule of events is available here.


Recognition. Congratulations to the players who advanced in rank this last month. Special congratulations go to Elaine Clair who achieved the rank of Emerald Life Master. You have to play very well for a long time to get 7500 points!

 

Anne Marie Corner----Advanced NABC Master

Ed Hino----------------.Sectional Master





Elaine Clair


Emerald Life Master


Education



Summer Substitute Mentors Needed. Deb needs some help for some of the summer Tuesday Shuffle & Deal evening classes. She would be most appreciative if you would please call or text her at 973-769-9619.


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


New Fall Beginner Class. Sundays from noon until 2:00. Spread the word!


Joann Glasson’s Lessons: Last June lesson is Monday June 19 at 10 a.m. Click here for details.

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 playing K-Q-10 in hand opposite low cards in dummy, play low to the queen first, not the king, to tempt the defender with the ace siting over you to take the ace and spare you the guess on the next round.”




From 100 Winning Bridge Tips

by Ron Klinger

Deal of the Week

by Bucky Sydnor




It's Your Call



One of my favorite columns in ACBL’s monthly Bridge Bulletin is “It’s Your Call” (IYC), and the current editor, Sue Munday, does a fabulous job presenting the panelists’ bidding comments.


I have been reading IYC since I was a non-Life Master. Of course, I did not understand a lot of it as I was still learning how to bid under normal conditions rather than difficult ones, which are the only auctions they consider in IYC. But I learned, nonetheless. I remember one hand had 3 card support for partner’s opening major and only an outside ace. All the panelists voted to give partner a single raise. Ever since reading that, I have done the same.


I have an IYC problem for you. The panelists would find it a cake walk, but I was slow on the uptake. See what you would do.


We are all white, I am in 3rd seat and pick up this very nice 1NT opener, overflowing with controls:


♠A8 A8532 K9 ♣A1082


The spot cards in my heart suit leave a lot to be desired, but the honors are a wonder to behold. Marty Bergen recently extolled the privilege it is, as well as the power, to hold three aces.


As I am enjoying my hand, my partner opens with 1♠--how nice; we’re going to game, at least. I make the normal response of 2. My partner tanks. (The opponents are silent throughout.)


This is a normal 2/1 auction and while I wait for my partner, I run through some of her possible second bids like 2♠, 3♠, 3, 4, and think of what my response could be.


But then my partner bids … 6!


I certainly did not consider hearing that from her! What could she possibly hold? I have 3 aces and the king of the fourth suit. How can she jump to 6?


So, I began to review some facts. First, my partner is a competent Intermediate bridge player on her way to becoming an Advanced one. So, this bid is not some piece of folly.


Second, she raised me—to understate it!—in hearts, so she almost certainly has at least four, if not five.


Third, she jumped to 6; she did not invite a heart slam or go slow. I take that to mean that the power of her hand would be hard or impossible to describe no matter how slowly we bid it.


Fourth, she is missing 3 aces and the king of diamonds, and yet she bid 6. She cannot know—and certainly would not be guessing—that I have 3 aces. I did, though, make a 2/1 response to her 1♠, so it would be legitimate for her to place me with one ace. If she only needs 1 ace from me (in one of her suits) and can bid 6, then she must have the outstanding ace and something like


♠KQJ10x KQJx Axxx ♣—


Her bid was quite risky. If I had held


♠x A98xx xxx ♣AKJx


we’d be in a very bad contract. But she got lucky; I held the perfect hand for her.


Why am I thinking that she holds the ♠KQJ10x and KQJx? Why can’t she hold, say, the ♠KJ109x(x) and/or KQ10x(x) and still bid 6?


Let’s think about the spade suit first. If she holds the ♠KQJ10x, her spade suit is almost certainly a “one loser” suit; all she needs from me for it to be only one loser is two spades and a 4-2 break. Indeed, she could well have ♠KQJ10xx. So, she does not need me to hold the ♠A, even though she seems to be assuming I hold a major suit ace (a weakness of her 6 bid). If she only holds ♠KJ109x, she needs me to hold either the ♠A or the ♠Q, or she needs the ♠Q to be onside. That is asking a lot for a jump to 6.


Turning to her likely heart holding, let’s look at the possibility that I do hold only one major suit ace and it is the ♠A. Then what does she need for the heart suit to be a one-loser suit? If she holds the KQ10x, I am definitely losing the A. But I may also lose the J if the opponents hold both missing heart honors.


There are several deals when “finding the jack” is the key to making the deal; on this deal, if I do not hold the A or J and she only holds the KQ10x, this would be one of them. Take three different, possible layouts when Dummy and Declarer hold KQ10x opposite 98xxx. The opponents’ hearts could be one of the following three (though there are 16 total possibilities):


KQ104

A) 2-------------------------AJ3

B) J32----------------------A

C) 32-----------------------.AJ

98765


With A) I have 2 heart losers no matter what.


With B) I will lose the first round of hearts, and if I did not finesse the 10 on that first round (as I should not), I must finesse it on the second round or LHO will win his J.


With C), however, to hold my heart losers to just one I must not finesse for the J on the second round.


That results in several times where things could easily go wrong. A good bidder would not put their partner in such a situation knowingly. They would have moved more slowly towards slam. So, it is almost certain she has the KQJx or perhaps KQ10xx.


The next question: does she hold the A? I could not imagine that this partner would have bid 6 without holding the A. She is just too good a bridge player to do that.


All that leads to the conclusion that she holds something like the following:


♠KQJ10x KQJx Axxx ♣—


Or, more distributional, perhaps


♠KQJ10xx KQ10xx Ax ♣—


After reviewing the above several times in my mind, I finally bid 7. LHO leads his J, partner tables a dummy close to what I guessed she had (but without the ♠10). 13 tricks are a laydown. Here’s the full deal:



I was so consumed with whether my partner held the A, that once I decided she had to have it, I failed to notice that I could count 13 tricks off the top no matter what they led and should therefore have bid 7NT rather than 7. (That, by the way, is the secret to good grand slam bidding: being able to count all 13 tricks during the auction.)


For me, the main takeaway was that trusting one’s partner is what good bridge is all about. If I cannot trust my partner, I should either stop playing with them or accept we cannot get to contracts that depend on a high level of trust between us, that is, we cannot play winning bridge. If you and your partner cannot trust each other, you can still have a lot of fun, especially if you are willing to laugh when things go badly for you. But you just cannot play winning bridge with any consistency.


As for the bidding, it was less than perfect, but it did succeed in communicating partner’s hand to me and got us to a good contract.


How would you and your favorite partner bid the two hands?

Laughter is the Best Medicine



Teacher called on six-year-old Johnny, the bridge player's son, to count for the class.


"One, two, three," began Johnny, "four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten-uh, jack, queen, king, ace"

Mon, May 29

Wed, May 31

73%

75%

David Dodgson & Dave Dresher

Leslie Scheid & Marcie Friedman


June Birthdays



Alexander, Donald

Baron, Paul

Desai, Rohit

Ferguson, Josephine

Fitzgerald III, Albert

Greenwell, Stephen

Harrington, Sharon

Headley, Tim

Hord, Lillie

Maglaty, Karen

Oglevee, Mary (Anne)

Ronderos, Al

Ronderos, Estelle

Saffren, Len

Salter, Kenneth

Salter, Tom

Snyder, Donna

Steinberg, Roberta

Stickel, Sandy

Stoll, Peter

Topaz, Marc

Yedenock, Diane




North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
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