Greetings to the
North Penn Bridge Community!
Week of 01/03/2022
From the Club Manager
Dave Dodgson


Membership Dues. It’s time to pay your 2022 dues. There are three payment options:

  1. pay with cash or by check at the club in the red mailbox;
  2. pay by mail;
  3. pay online. See the instructions at the bottom of our home page.
 
Shuffle and Deal with Deb Crisfield. Back by popular demand! This Wednesday, January 5 at 9:30 am.
 
January Events. January is Junior Fund month. Games throughout the month will be awarding extra points.

January 24-28 is Royal STaC. Scores are compared throughout the District and Gold and Red points will be awarded in addition to Silver points.

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 & Deal for Newer Players. The next session will be Wednesday, January 5 at 9:30 am.

Everyone is welcome - no partner needed. A mentor will be available to answer whatever questions might arise as you play. $5 per person per session. No scoring, no pressure!

2022 Lessons for Advancing Players.

Monday January 24 – 9:30 am: “How to Interfere with Opponent’s 1NT Opening Bid.”

Monday January 31 – 9:30 am: “What to do When Opponents Interfere with Your Partner’s 1NT Bid.”

Contact teacher John Dickenson at: [email protected] for more information.


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


Mel’s BOP (balance of power) Double

BOP doubles always show maximum or unrevealed extra values for previous actions. They do not show a stack of the opponent’s trump and are therefore not penalty doubles. This is the crux of what BOP doubles are:

  1. A BOP double says you don’t have a big fit with partner, and you don’t have a very long suit of your own - your hand is relatively balanced.
  2. A BOP double is frequently a double of a suit first bid on your left. It can also be a double of a suit where it is obvious the opponents have at least a four-four fit.
  3. With few exceptions, BOP doubles are made after both you and partner have bid at least once.”




From How You Can Play Bridge Like an Expert
by Mel Colchamiro

(See Chapter 15.)
Deal of the Week
by Bucky Sydnor



Why keep leading spades? What good does that do?
Declarer will just ruff.


That is the question for today’s deal. In it, North/South found their way to 4 in an uncontested auction. At other tables it may well have been contested, and seriously, but let’s leave that aside for today. Against 4 East led the ♠A, which Declarer ruffed immediately and here’s the full deal.
Declarer then drew trump in three rounds, ending in his hand, leaving declarer with only 1 more trump. He next attacked the diamond suit, leading his J. West rose with his A immediately and shifted to a low club. Declarer let it ride around to his ♣J, which set up the club suit, So Declarer won a total of 12 tricks: 5 hearts, 3 diamonds, and 4 clubs.

As Declarer seemed likely to play it, the defense may be able to set the contract. First, West should not win his A until the 3rd round of diamonds, cutting Declarer off from Dummy. How does West know it is safe to duck twice? Well, in my non-Life Master days I just hoped it was. But with signaling West can actually know for sure. When Declarer leads the J from his hand East should play his 2 (using standard carding), showing an odd number of diamonds: i.e., 1, 3 or 5.

This allows West to get a complete count on Declarer’s hand, which is not always the case when one defender gives his partner count. But it makes this deal particularly good for looking closely at count and how the defenders can use it.

In this situation West is interested in Declarer’s distribution, not East’s (though getting the count on one of their hands automatically allows for count on the other). In general, to use partner’s count signal one has to walk through three steps:

  • Go through each option for partner’s diamond holding—here 1, 3 or 5.

  • Then, for each option, one has to figure out what that number of diamonds in partner’s hand reveals of Declarer’s holding in the diamond suit.

  • Finally, one has to see if the bidding supports that holding for Declarer. (There’s that pesky bidding rearing its head. If this step is not your level now, just give yourself some time. It will be one day.)

As we will see, the bidding only supports partner having 3 diamonds, but let’s work through partner having 1 or 5 diamonds first. If East has 1 diamond, then Declarer has 5 and would have bid 3 at his second bid with 0 spades, 5 hearts, 5 diamonds and 3 clubs (0=5=5=3), not 3♣.

Next, if East has 5 diamonds and therefore 5=3=5=0 distribution, he might have overcalled 1♠ or bid 2 to show spades and a minor. Furthermore, that would give declarer 0=5=1=7 distribution. With his club suit being longer and stronger (headed by the AK) than his heart suit, he would have likely opened 1♣ rather that 1.

Finally, if partner has 3 diamonds, declarer then has 3 diamonds, making his distribution 0=5=3=5, which fits with the bidding nicely. So, Voilà! West can hold up his A till the 3rd round.

Upon winning his A on the 3rd round of diamonds, West should lead a spade. True, Declarer will simply ruff it, but so what? Players can be averse to leading a suit that Declarer can ruff. But in this situation it is somewhat like leading from KQJ10, knowing that Declarer has the A. Yes, with such a suit you will lose to the A, but look at the tricks you have set up after that.

Back to today’s deal, by leading spades West forces Declarer to use his last trump, as well as forces Declarer to win in his hand, thereby setting up West’s ♣Q as a sure trick and entry to his now good spades. Eventually Declarer will have to give West his ♣Q. Then West can lead spades and Declarer can no longer ruff them. If West had done that, Declarer would have only come to 9 tricks—5 hearts (including 2 spade ruffs), 2 diamonds and 2 clubs.

Declarer can do a better job. He can guarantee the contract by only drawing two rounds of hearts, keeping a heart honor in Dummy. Then, leaving the last trump out, he should attack diamonds. Now, even if West holds up on the A until the 3rd round of diamonds, when West wins his A and then leads a spade, Declarer can ruff in his hand, draw the final trump ending in Dummy, and win a 3rd diamond for his 10th trick.

If West holds up his A twice, Declarer has an even better line.  Declarer abandons diamonds after the second round, draws the last trump and goes to work on clubs, playing for them to split 3-2. When they do, Declarer will get 11 tricks—5 hearts (including 2 spade ruffs), 2 diamonds and 4 clubs.

Do not let these various lines of declarer play obscure the point to remember: a defender should not have a blanket rule to avoid letting Declarer ruff the defenders’ long suit. Sometimes, it may just be the way to get a good result, whether it is setting the contract or holding declarer to the fewest tricks possible.
Laughter is the Best Medicine


I favor light opening bids. When you're my age, you can never be sure that the bidding will get back around to you again.


Oswald Jacoby at 77
76%
Elaine Clair & Edward Leach

January Birthdays


Berenbaum, Carl
Blickman, Linda
Bresler, Gina
Bumbry, Russell
Clemens, Jon
Goldsman, Ronald
Harrington, Ida Jean
Leach, Ed
Morse, Susan
O'Connor, Priscilla
Roden, Carol
Sgro, Christine
Wilson, Cliff
Young, Winnie
North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
(215) 699-4932