North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 05/08/2023

Calling All 299 Players



Don’t forget we offer a game for you on Thursdays at noon. And this week, silver points are being awarded! We need a minimum of three tables to run the 0-299 game, so please let us know you are coming by signing up in the book at the club or emailing the club at [email protected].

Hospitality



Starting this week, because of the continued rise in cost, sodas with be $1. Additionally, snack contributions would be greatly appreciated. We have several members who regularly provide yummy treats, but as the food costs rise it would be wonderful if others would step up to make our playing afternoons even more enjoyable than they already are! Many thanks.

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



STaC Week. Silver points awarded all this week.


May is Grass Roots Month. The last three weeks will feature Grass Roots charity games.


May 20. Game Day from 1-4 p.m. Join us at the club for an afternoon of board games. We will provide two or three interesting options, but if you have a favorite, bring it along. Family and friends are invited. Please email Beth Milton at [email protected] to let her know you will be coming.


June 21. The Longest Day benefit game for the Alzheimer’s Association. Click on this link for details.


June 26-July 2. Valley Forge Regional.


Recognition. Congratulations to the following club members who have advanced in rank:


Nancy Parke---------Life Master

Barbara Daly--------NABC Master

Sheila Zamkoff-----Club Master

Rohit Desai---------.Junior Master

Mary Lingerfeldt---Junior Master


Rehoboth Results. Congratulations to the following club members who did well:


  • Lisa Mita 66.31
  • Mark Cohen 66.31
  • Susan Morse 31.89
  • John Dickenson 31.89
  • Elaine Clair 31.00
  • Tony Zacchei 31.00
  • Rex Saffer 26.53
  • Ellen Luchette 22.72
  • Toysie Walker 14.74
  • Cathy Strauss 13.88
  • Andy Rosenberg 11.67
  • Sharon Harrington 7.49
  • Anne-Marie Corner 7.49
  • Dave Cohan 6.24
  • Maribeth Fryman 3.60
  • Don Adams 3.42
  • Jane Bonenberger 2.79
  • Deb Crisfield 1.94
  • Nancy Parke 1.86
  • Evelyn Melchiorre 1.86
  • Elaine Watters 1.86
  • Anne Cheney 1.86
  • Jackie Zelle 1.86
  • Diane Yedenock 1.26
  • David Silberman 1.16
  • Mary Tassaro 0.69

Stay Tuned



The North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club will be Fifty Years Old this year! Plans are underway for a very special celebration. As a pre-curser to the event, we would like to publish historical happenings and anecdotes. If you have a contribution, please contact Toysie Walker at [email protected].

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. Last lesson for the month will be Monday morning, May 22. 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



Reading the Dummy


“Just as a good detective has to think like a crook to ferret out clues, so a good defender has to think like a declarer to find his clues. The secrets of declarer’s strategy are written in dummy and a defender can learn to read the messages.


When dummy comes down, while declarer is counting his tricks and looking for more, make believe you’re declarer and that’s your dummy. Start imagining how you’d use those 13 cards to the greatest advantage. Then, form a plan to foil declarers use of dummy’s strength. Your battle cry is: set this contract!


The dummy tells you whether you should wage:


  • An Active Defense:
  • Attacking dummy’s entries, or
  • Attacking dummy’s trump holding, or
  • Grabbing your winners quick


  • A Passive Defense:
  • Letting declarer take the initiative, while you do nothing. Wait for your tricks to come to you.”





From Bridge Made Easy, Book Three, How to Win More Tricks

by Carolyn Sydnor

Deal of the Week

by Bucky Syndor





Misplay This Deal With Me



A while back I wrote a piece on the need to draw trumps when your side has an 8- or 9-card fit even though you have a poor trump suit. I failed to follow my own advice on today’s deal, and we got a flat bottom for my mistake. Take a look.



The auction was straightforward. After RHO opened a club, I overcalled a NT (15-18), and LHO doubled, telling his partner he thought I was going down. It was great hand evaluation; playing in 1NT I would be down two on a good day. My partner made the best of a dire situation by transferring me to hearts. I accepted the transfer and got to play it there without being doubled.


LHO led the ♠K, I won my ♠A and proceeded to play the deal as badly as possible. If you click through the deal, you will see that my failure to lead trumps resulted in the opponents getting four trump tricks. As the cards lie, if I lead trumps, they should only get two.


I can hope—not know but hope—to hold the opponents to only two heart tricks. If I cover either the J or Q with my king—there is a 75% chance of being able to do so— they will only make their ace and one more honor as our spot cards are better than theirs.


Looking at the whole deal, it is not an easy one to declare. While I want to draw trumps as soon as possible, I also need to set up two club tricks. Meanwhile the opponents have several ways to conduct their defense. Regardless of how well I play the deal, I have only seven likely tricks: 1 spade, 3 hearts in one way or another, 1 diamond and 2 clubs. The opponents, against competent declarer play, have five sure tricks (2 hearts, 2 diamonds, 1 club) and may make additional tricks in spades, clubs or even hearts, depending on how the play goes. My goal in fact is to go down no more than one since we are vulnerable. Indeed, I had better be sure we are down no more than one; down two is -200 on a part score deal.


One way to play the deal is to lead the ♣K after winning the opening lead. RHO wins her ace and leads a second club, setting up her partner for a club ruff. I win with my queen, ruff a spade in Dummy, and lead a heart.


Now RHO has a decision to make. Her best defense is to play low—if she rises with her A and gives her partner a club ruff, I can now make the contract. When she plays low and I do as well, LHO wins his J and then exits a low diamond. I win the diamond in my hand, ruff a spade in Dummy and lead another heart. RHO will rise with her A, hoping (against hope) that she can score her Q later. (She can’t.) She plays her Q, which holds, and then her J. LHO overtakes the J and exits a high spade. I ruff in Dummy, draw the final round of trumps, and have to concede my last spade to LHO. If the play goes that way, I come to seven tricks for down one. And a top.


There are many ways to play this deal, which makes it complicated, but the point I want to emphasize is that I should have drawn trumps. By not doing so, the opponents managed to get four trump tricks. Big mistake.


On this deal, I lost my way because of sloppy thinking. I’ve had a lot of success over the past several months delaying the drawing of trump, but today delaying was wrong. I needed to play trumps early to prevent the opponents from getting more than the 2 trump tricks they had coming to them. When I failed to do so, I gave them the opportunity to crossruff in 2 side suits, and they took full advantage of my error, gaining 2 extra trump tricks.


Every time you declare, you must decide when to draw the opponents’ trumps. One common error is to delay drawing trumps because your suit has holes in it, only to discover that delaying the process turns out to be costly. If you decide to delay, make sure you have a good reason! On this board I didn’t.


One bidding observation: once my LHO doubled 1NT, advising partner that “it’s our hand”, my opponents should not allow me to play in an undoubled contract, i.e., they should either double 2 or bid on. Fortunately for them, I misplayed the deal, presenting them with a top rather than a bottom.

Laughter is the Best Medicine



The bridge bug was in an exciting game when word was brought to him that his house was on fire.


He hurriedly finished the hand he was playing and then said, "Sorry, fellows, looks like I'll have to break up the game. Three more rubbers and I quit."

Wed, May 03

70%

Estelle Ronderos & Mitchell Snyder


May Birthdays



Abrams, Betty

Adams, Tay

Baker, Donald

Berman, Connie

Cohan, David

Diamondstein, Bobbi

DiFerdinando, Lori

Firing, Gladys

Franks, Suzanne

Godshall, Richard

Grady, Paul

Greenberg, Carole

Heintzelman, Jane

Ingram, P. J.

Lucard, Frank

Palen, Cynthia

Shoemaker, Alison

Snyder, Mitchell

Taylor, Robert



North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
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