North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 09/25/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



Fiftieth Anniversary Week was a big success thanks to a large turnout and all those who helped make it work. Mitch provided a great history of the club but didn’t mention his own role. Here are excerpts from comments I received from Steve Becker, who has been a director and officer of our club:


Mitch has at various times held all of the board offices and has been the club manager, a truly under-appreciated job. For years, he was the contact for making partnerships and a point of contact for folks who were coming into the area, helping them get acquainted with the club and form new partnerships. It is important to note that his leadership was not restricted to holding positions but knowing when to encourage others who were better suited to hold office at that time. And when to step up to fill a void. He was always looking for ways to improve the club. Mitch was the one who conceived and developed the limited game(s) that quickly became an important part of the club’s continued success.…but, I can say with absolutely certainty that we would not be where we are today without Mitch Snyder.


Flight B NAP Game. We had 22 pairs at our club for District 4 Flight B NAP last Saturday. Everything went well thanks to Pat Andrews who acted as our host. Congratulations to the pairs from North Penn who qualified: Dave Dresher & Dave Dodgson first at North Penn and third overall; and Ed Ritvo & Everette Harris second at North Penn and fourth overall. On to Louisville!


Online Games. The club has had a Tuesday night game for many years. During the pandemic, it was switched to an online game. Unfortunately attendance has recently been very limited. Please consider playing in this game and the Robot Individual so we can keep them going.


September 25-29 - International Fund Month with extra points for an extra dollar.


October Schedule:


  • October 2-13: Charity games
  • October 14: the Robot Individual
  • October 16-27: Club Appreciation games
  • October 25: the ACBL-wide Instant Matchpoint Game
  • October 31: CLUB IS CLOSED because of the Lancaster Regional


Upcoming Tournaments:


  • September 30 is NAP District 4 Flights A and C
  • October 6-8 is the Philadelphia Sectional in Cherry Hill
  • October 20-21 is the Allentown Sectional
  • October 30 to November 5 is the Lancaster Regional in Manheim, PA. Rooms are going fast so be sure to make your reservations now!

Education



New Lesson Series - Tuesday Nights from 7-9 p.m. Three more sessions. Click here for details.


2/1 Saturday Class with Lisa Mita at North Penn Bridge Club.


When:-----October 7th through November 4th

Time:------9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Cost:-----..$125 for five lessons.

Sign up:---Email Lisa at [email protected]

------------Or sign up at the club.


Joann Glasson Lessons. October 9 and 23. Click here for details.


King of Prussia Bridge Club (KOP) Lessons


For details regarding the dates and times of upcoming lessons offered by John Dickenson and Dennis Shaub at KOP, please check our website.

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.

Ask the Expert



Email your questions, or a pesky hand, or something you’d like to know about bidding or playing to Toysie at [email protected]. She will forward them to the panel, one will be chosen, and the question and answers will be printed in the following week’s newsletter.



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



“Even though standard technique may be to take a finesse, beware of the normal finesse play in trumps if a ruff is threatening.”




From 100 Winning Bridge Tips

by Ron Klinger

Deal of the Week

by Bucky Sydnor

([email protected])





It's Your Play



Holding


♠J75 A652 K10876 ♣Q


you are on lead, defending 3♠ after this auction:


P – 1♠ – P – 2♠

P – 3♣ – P – 3♠

All pass


You decide to lead the ♠5, and this is what you see:


Dummy: ♠432 83 Q93 ♣KJ1084


You: ♠J75 A652 K10876 ♣Q


The play goes ♠4, ♠K, ♠A. Declarer then comes out with the ♠10.


It’s your play.


Did you decide that partner had the ♠Q and so you ducked the spade around to him? If so, for this deal you got it right.


Or did you decide that Declarer had the deception skills of Zia Mahmood and, holding the ♠Q, was baiting you to duck? If so, then you must play your ♠J or lose it.


Would your decision as to what to play have been easier for you if partner, holding the ♠KQ initially, had played the ♠Q initially instead of the ♠K?


Here is the full deal:



The issue here is that even if partner had played the ♠Q, on the first trick, rather than the ♠K, there are limits for you to be able to know what is going on. You must determine what you think is going on and go with that.


There are, to be sure, clues, and one of them gives a pretty definite answer about what to do. But it does not rule out other possibilities requiring a different play. Before I go into that helpful information, here is a little context: when East plays the trump king, it may not be a singleton nor lowest of touching honors. When partner makes an opening lead against a suit contract in a side suit, we need to tell her, most of the time—this is bridge, remember, there are always exceptions—as much about our holding in that suit as we can with the card we play so she can know what to do on defense.


But when partner leads a trump, things change. Third seat can play whatever card she thinks will make life harder for declarer. Third seat is not—again, most of the time—completely concerned about revealing her trump holding to partner. Partner may false card in attempt to fool Declarer.


Turning to the wealth of information for ducking, when partner plays the ♠K and Declarer wins and leads the ♠10, it is highly likely that Declarer does not hold the ♠Q. The reason is best seen if we look at what he would do when he does hold the ♠Q. When East plays the ♠K on the opening lead, it may be from a few holdings, including ♠KJ and ♠Kx. The reason to play the K is, if Declarer holds ♠AQ10xx(x), playing the ♠K sets up partner’s ♠J. So, if Declarer had held ♠AQ10xx(x), and had East ducked the spade, the defense would have gotten no spade tricks.


Moreover, if East did hold ♠K and J, Declarer may fear that East actually holds ♠KJx. Having ♠AQ10xx(x) himself, he might have returned to dummy in a side suit to take a finesse in spades, protecting against such a holding.


Secondly, Declarer, again assuming a holding of ♠AQ10xx(x), may decide not to worry about the ♠J and just plop down the ♠Q. One rationale for such a move, besides lazy thinking, is that if the ♠J does not fall, it would be to Declarer’s advantage to leave it out, so that he can eventually throw in whoever holds the ♠J later for an end play.


So, if Declare holds the ♠Q, it is highly likely that he would go to Dummy to take a finesse against East or play it next.

Declarer did none of those things. That strongly suggests he does not have the ♠Q.


There is a second scenario, though, however rare. That is that Declarer has a 6-card spade suit, reads East’s play of the ♠K as a singleton, thereby placing West with two outstanding spades, the ♠Jx, and a sure spade trick. Deception in bridge is based on knowing how an opponent will, in this case, defend a deal and then to play in such a way as to fool him into playing it wrong. If the great Zia Mahmood, considered to possibly be the most devious bridge expert of all time, was declaring and decided that the only chance for an extra trick was to trick you out of your ♠J, then he would lead the ♠10, hoping you will duck for the very reason that you will conclude your partner holds the ♠Q. If you hit upon this scenario, as you think about whether to play your ♠J, consider whether Declarer is good enough to make this kind of deceptive play.


There is no sure-fire way of getting your play to the second round of spades right. You must think it through and then go with what you decide is the best play. The odds strongly favor ducking the ♠10. But Declarer may be channeling Zia and you will kick yourself when the ♠10 holds and he next plays the ♠Q.


Two other points are worth making. First, if your partner finds herself in the same situation as described above, and after thinking about it, gets it wrong, show sympathy for her. That’s what being a good partner is about. It could just as well have been you. Be the only friend in the room she has when things do not go her way through no fault of her own (and even when she is at fault).


The other point to note is that, in assessing a defensive situation, decide how Declarer would normally play the deal holding the card you are concerned about, i.e., if he held that card, he would play one way; if he doesn’t hold it, he will play another way. That type of analysis is good defensive thinking at the table. What that means is that the better you become as declarer, the more you know the way declarer is likely to play a hand. You can apply that knowledge when you are on defense.


Doing that will make you a very dangerous opponent indeed.

Tue, Sep 05

Wed, Sep 13

Fri, Sep 22

75%

72%

70%

Carl Perchonock & Barry Dehlin

Pat Andrews & Toysie Walker

Jackie Zelle & Pat Cieslinski


Useful Links



Recent ACBL Rank Achievements


Results of recent games on NPDBC website


Results of recent games on ACBL Live


Info about online games on NPDBC website


NPDBC Home Page


Archived NPDBC Newsletters


ACBL Home Page


BBO Home Page


September Birthdays



Andrews, Pat

Basile, Diane

Bearn, Lorna

Dowling, James

Heater, Edward

Lerner, Maribeth

Levin, Joyce

Mueller, Patricia

Scafuro, Dale

Umphlet, Larry



North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
(215) 699-4932
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