North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 02/27/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



March Schedule


February 27-March 10 - Club Championship games with extra points for no extra cost.

 

March 2: 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


March 11 - Game Day from 1 to 4 p.m. Join us for another lively get together featuring Euro style games and Maj Jang. Friends and favorite games welcome. Please contact Beth Milton at [email protected] with questions or suggestions.


March 18 - Robot Individual at 4 p.m.


March 20-24 - SUPER Club Championships with triple points.


March 25 - special game honoring Pat Andrew’s contributions as our past president. We will start with a potluck lunch at 11:30 followed by an individual tournament at 12:15. This is also a SUPER Club Championship game. All proceeds will go to North Penn at Pat’s request. Look for a sign up sheet at the club.


ACBL Tournaments


March 4-6 - The NABC Robot Individual.


March 9-19 - The Spring NABC in New Orleans.

Education



Shuffle and Deal. Do you know anyone who played bridge long ago and would like to get back into the game? Suggest that they come to one of our Shuffle and Deal get togethers on Tuesday evenings from 7-9 p.m. and Wednesday mornings from 9:30-11:30 a.m.


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



After the opponents pre-empt, play for any critical card in the other suits to be with the partner of the pre-emptor.”





From 100 Winning Bridge Tips

by Ron Klinger

Deal of the Week

by Bucky Sydnor




Trick 3, Declarer Is To Lead, What's Your Plan?



You’re in a pairs game, 1st seat, all red, and pick up:

-----♠QJ83 -- 8 ♣AKJ7642


You open 1C and the auction goes

-----1♣ – 2 – 2 – 3

-----3♠ – p – 4♠ – all pass



LHO leads the K, which wins. She now leads her Q, which you ruff in your hand. What’s your plan and what card do you play next?


While you are thinking about that, let me give you a different hand for comparison. I am in a Swiss team match at the Raleigh Sectional last month. I find myself in 6♠ against the lead of the 9. Here’s the deal:


--------------------♠K63 7 A108 ♣AQJ1092


----♠J2 KQ87642 973 ♣3-------♠1094 A QJ52 ♣87654


--------------------♠AQ875 J1093 K64 ♣K


If spades break 3-2, and they were, the play is straightforward. I win the K in hand, draw trumps immediately, in three rounds, cash the ♣K. Lead up to Dummy’s A and run his 5 clubs for all 13 tricks.


Now, back to our deal of the week and my two questions: What’s your plan and what card do you play next? Your plan needs two parts:

  1. How do I go about drawing trumps?
  2. Which long suit will I set up to run, dummy’s hearts or my clubs?


Let’s look at which long suit to set up. Setting up the heart suit is tempting as it has only one potential loser, the K. If the K is with East you can ruff it out. If the K is with West you lose 3 tricks (1 spade, 1 heart, 1 diamond).


Setting up the club suit requires ruffing twice in Dummy to protect against a 4-2 break, with the Q heading the 4-card holding. Moreover, if you start in on ruffing the club suit, you are in your hand already, requiring one less entry to set it up than to set up the heart suit.


Turning to trumps, I intentionally phrased the first question poorly in an effort to avoid giving away the answer. The actual question should be: When do you draw trumps? If your plan is to do as I did in the second deal above, namely, start drawing trumps right away, you are mistaken. You should set about setting up your club suit immediately. On this particular deal, you can draw trumps as part of setting up clubs.


Lead a low club from your hand, ruff low in Dummy, lead a low spade from dummy and if the ♠A is not played by your RHO, play your K. If that holds, lead another low club from your hand and ruff with the ♠10.


Why, with the second hand, do I draw trumps immediately, where with the first hand I do not? If you have a long suit that is already set up, like the club holding of the second deal, then you should draw trumps immediately. But if your long suit is like the club suit of the first deal, you need to set it up before you draw trumps completely. Indeed, setting up the side suit may even involve letting them ruff it because you haven’t finished drawing trumps. Today’s deal does not illustrate that. In fact, today’s deal is easy because Declarer did not get a 3-1 spade break, much less a 4-0 break.


As for ruffing immediately, if you cash the ♣A and K first, and there is a 4-2 club break, you are in danger of an overruff by the opponents. In fact, if LHO has the ♠97 and she ruffs twice, she will promote a defensive trick for herself. Ruffing immediately allows you to ruff low the first time.


In today’s deal, Declarer only came to 10 tricks because she decided to set up Dummy’s hearts rather than her clubs. If she sets up her clubs from the start, she’ll come to 11 tricks.


When you have a side suit to set it up, set it up early. Shel Silverstein had a wonderful children’s poem that our family loved:

-----If you are a bird, be an early bird,

-----But if you are a worm, sleep late.


Be the bird at the bridge table: set up your long side suit early.

Laughter is the Best Medicine



Mike Lawrence, a new partner, insists I learn a new convention. I agree. The convention is that after a major suit opening bid, a jump to the three level of the other major is an artificial bid, showing an opening hand with at least four card support for partner's major plus an UNKNOWN singleton. Opener can ask for the singleton by bidding the next step. Everything is going fine (because the convention has never come up) until we are playing in the Nationals Men's Pairs in Houston surrounded by kibitzers. Mike opens 1S, next hand passes, and I have: S. - H. AKJ10xxxx D. QJ C. AKx. I completely forget our new convention and respond 3H to show my great hand. Mike alerts. They ask and he tells them I have spades with an unknown singleton. He jumps to 4S which means he doesn't care where my singleton is. I bid 5H. He alerts. They ask. He says: "I have a VOID IN HEARTS" and then bids 6S! I bid 7H! He alerts again. They ask. He says: "Cancel all the other alerts, I'm passing!" Mike has: S. AKQ10x H. xxx D. xx C. QJx. They lead a club and I make it! The kibitzers are so disgusted that they all leave!





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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