North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 07/17/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



Hello From Chicago. There are a number of North Penn players here. Hope more of you will be arriving this week. I am happy to report the Willgruber team advanced to the semifinals of the GNT Flight C. Congratulations! Looking ahead, the summer NABC will be in Philadelphia in 2025.


The Bobbie Gomer Challenge. The next team competition between local clubs will take place on Wednesday August 23 at Yorktown Bridge Club. The last competiton was won by North Penn so please get your team together to compete and defend the title. Details can be found on our website.


NAP Flight B Pre-Registration. North Penn is one of the hosts for the NAP Flight B District 4 game on Saturday, September 23. Players are required to register with the club where they plan to play. Early registration is $64; last minute registration is $80. Registration can be made online (see details on our website) or by check made out to the North Penn Bridge Club placed in the red box at the club. Be sure to list your names and ACBL numbers. Many of you have already qualified, so now is the time to register. If you aren’t sure whether you have qualified, you can click here to find out.


July Schedule:


  • July 21: 10:00 a.m. Swiss teams
  • July 22: 4 p.m. Robot Individual
  • July 24-28: NAP Qualifying games
  • July 31-August 6: STaC week


Upcoming Tournaments:


  • July 27-30 – The online regional, Virtual Vacation. Click here for details
  • August 21-27 – The Baltimore Regional

Condolences



With great sadness we report that Peggy Butera passed away on July 7, 2023. Peggy was a loyal member of the North Penn Bridge Club community, and an avid player for many, many years.

Education



Shuffle & Deal--.Wednesdays at 9:30 a.m.

Tuesday evenings from 7 to 9 p.m.


2/1 Class with Lisa Mita at North Penn Bridge Club. Beginning Saturday September 30th and running through October 28th on Saturday mornings. The cost for the five lessons is $125. Please contact Lisa at [email protected] or sign up at the club.


New Fall Beginner Class with Deb Crisfield. Beginning Sunday September 10th and running on consecutive Sundays through October 15th from 12 noon to 2 p.m. Stay tuned for class details and spread the word! The first two classes will be free! If you know of someone who is interested, please have them contact Deb by email at [email protected] or by phone at 973-769-9619.

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



“Sometimes the bears win and…

Sometimes the bulls win…

But – the pigs never win!

Don’t be a pig.”




From How You Can Play Like An Expert

by Mel Colchamiro

Deal of the Week

by Bucky Sydnor

([email protected])



Good Things Come to Defenders Who Wait



Today’s deal holds a special place in my memory because I declared it in the 3rd round of a one-session Swiss event, but the lesson I want to draw from it is about defensive play. While the winning defense is not hard, West did not find it. Perhaps walking through it will be helpful to others.


Looking over West’s shoulder, we find she holds:


♠K3 8754 K10 ♣AQJ108


She is 2nd seat, all white, and views this auction:


2 - p – 4 all pass


Her opening lead was the ♠K, possibly because she felt leading her doubleton ♠K was safer than leading her doubleton K. Whatever her thinking, the lead was risky, as Declarer’s 2 bid had not denied either the ♠Q or the ♠A and may have set up a trick for Declarer. However, after Dummy tables this collection:


♠Q9865 AK AQ93 ♣93


♠K3 8754 K10 ♣AQJ108


she has hit paydirt as her king holds the trick. She leads her remaining spade, Declarer plays Dummy’s ♠6, East plays the ♠7, and Declarer ruffs low. He then leads a low heart to the A, West playing her 5 and East the 9. In what can over-generously be described as very poor thinking, Declarer plays the 3 from Dummy, East the 2, Declarer, the J and West the K.


West now plays her ♣A and comes out a club to Declarer’s ♣K, handing him his contract on a silver platter (6 hearts, 3 diamonds, 1 club). Here is the full deal:



Let’s go back, take West’s hand, and look at the defense of the deal, starting with opening lead:


♠K3 8754 K10 ♣AQJ108


When you are on opening lead, the first thing you should do is think about the auction: how many points do the opponents hold between them and what has partner shown, if anything, about his hand. In this case partner hasn’t bid so West can’t even lead his suit.


Then you should think about where your side’s tricks are coming from. Sometimes, when you have a bad hand, and your partner has passed throughout the auction, you will have no idea where your side’s tricks are coming from. But in this deal, when you hold 13 HCP and the opponents are in game, you may well be holding all, or certainly most of the points for the defense. Treat your high cards with care!


Turning to today’s deal, I can only guess why West led her ♠K. Maybe she felt she should not lead one of her low trumps. There are many times when players make an opening lead of a trump, and it is a mistake. West seems to have learned that lesson well. Unfortunately, this deal is an exception to not leading trumps willy-nilly. Looking at just the trump suit, we can see West is not giving up a heart trick from her hand and, assuming South has opened a weak 2 with 6 hearts and North raised with 3, her partner is void. She cannot be finessing East out of a heart winner. In this situation, a heart lead is very safe.


Why would she want to make a safe lead? She wants to protect her source of potential tricks in her hand, i.e., her two side kings and the ♣AQ. She can rightly assume Declarer holds at most one ace. While it is likely to be the A, to be on the safe side, she should avoid leading one of her kings in case Declarer might, instead, hold the ace or queen of that very suit. Instead, she should make a safe, or “passive” lead, namely, a low heart. An added benefit is that, with four hearts headed by the 8, she would be expecting her partner to be void in hearts and her partner’s play to the opening lead will tell her what suit partner is interested in, or not, if he makes a negative discard.


After West’s heart lead, Dummy hits. Here are the two hands again for ease of reference:


♠Q9865 AK AQ93 ♣93


♠K3 8754 K10 ♣AQJ108


West discovers Declarer does not hold the A or the K, and that East, in fact, has one heart. She finds out that Declarer can finesse her K. She also must realize that she should never lead clubs. Never. Eventually someone else will have to lead them. She, as a defender, needs to wait for good things to come her way, namely club winners.


After Dummy wins the heart lead, Declarer would lead a low spade, trying to establish a communication link to his hand. East would play the ♠7 and it wins the trick, Declarer playing the 4.


If you are trying to put together Declarer’s hand, that first round of spades tells you almost everything. You now know that Declarer had no spade honors since partner’s 7 won the trick. The only remaining honors which you cannot see are the QJ10, J and ♣K. Declarer must hold the QJ10, since partner’s only heart was the 9. Moreover, unless Declarer is a punch-drunk preemptor, he also holds the ♣K.


Meanwhile, your excellent partner, after winning the ♠7, leads his ♣6. Declarer plays low and you win with the ♣10.


What now? Do not cash the ♣A! Keep waiting!


Partner’s seemingly highest club says he has no club honor, which confirms that Declarer has the ♣K. You do not want to set up his ♣K for a trick, so keep waiting. Once again make a passive exit of a low heart.


Winning the 2nd heart in Dummy, Declarer would play a low spade, ruffing with the Q, and then draw your last two hearts with his J10, discarding spades from Dummy as East discards first a low diamond and then spades, keeping parity with Dummy. Declarer would next lead his J. (Aha! Declarer did have all the outstanding honors. It is fun when you figure out Declarer’s honors, even if it was the easiest case to do that.)


You cover with your K. Indeed, ducking is out of the question as you can see that if you duck by playing the 10, Dummy’s last 3 diamonds will be all good, giving Declarer 6 heart tricks and 4 diamonds, and his contract. (If you ask, “What if Declarer has 4 diamonds?”, the answer is that he makes his contract, and you couldn’t stop him.) Declarer now wins 3 diamond tricks as partner can beat Dummy’s low 4th diamond. Although Declarer will get to pitch 1 of his 3 remaining clubs on the 3rd round of diamonds, whatever he does next, he loses 2 more club tricks, and the contract is set.


It was essential for you not to cash your ♣A after winning the ♣10 earlier. You, as West, were key to setting the contract, but you had to wait, and keep waiting until the final two tricks to set it.


The key point is this: when you see that Dummy has two low cards in a suit, in this case clubs, and you hold AQ, do not play the suit unless your partner tells you otherwise through his signals. (Since this is bridge, there is an exception or two, but they are rare and you can ignore them, at least for now.)


Remember: Good thing come to defenders who wait!


Postmortem: For those we are interested in such things, after West’s opening lead of the ♠K, the contract is cold, though Declarer would need an impressive imagination to see how.

Tue, Jul 11

75%

Christine Sgro & Priscilla O'Connor


July Birthdays



Binnick, Steven

Clair, Elaine

Dickenson, John

Hallman, David

Kirrstetter, Gail

Melchiorre, Evelyn

Milton, Beth

Morganstein, Stanley

Moulton, Lisa

Scena, Sherry

Tilney, Sandy

Tweedie, Harry

Walker, Toysie

North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
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