North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 10/30/2023

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



Board of Governors. Our club is run by our Board of Governors. There are 11 members of the board, 9 elected and two appointed. Elected members serve three-year terms and we elect three members every year in December. Please let Mike Carver or me know if you wish to serve on the Board and we will put you up for election. If no more than three people are up for election, they are elected by acclamation.


Board Meeting. The next meeting of the Board of Directors is Monday, November 6 at 10 a.m. All are welcome.


Instant Matchpoint Game. This event was a big success. A couple of pairs received gold. If you played and didn’t get a booklet with the results and analysis, there are still a few available at the club.


North Penn Schedule during the Spooky Nook Regional:


Tuesday:------=Open for evening Shuffle & Deal;

---Closed for morning game;

---Closed for online evening game.

Wednesday:--...Open for morning Shuffle & Deal;

---Closed for afternoon game.

Thursday:-----..Closed

Friday:---------.Open


November Schedule


  • November 6-10 is Club Championships week
  • November 8 is the morning 0-50 game – no shuffle and deal
  • November 11 is the afternoon Robot Individual
  • November 13-17 is StaC week
  • November 23-24 CLUB CLOSED


Upcoming Tournaments:


  • October 30 to November 5 is the Lancaster Regional in Manheim, PA.
  • November 23 to December 3 is the winter NABC in Atlanta
  • December 8-10 is the Wilmington Sectional
  • December 15-16 is the I/N Regional in Allentown
  • December 19-22 is the Online Regional

Education



Sunday Shuffle & Deal from 12 noon to 2 p.m. Open to anyone who wants a casual learning opportunity. Come out and hone your skills!


Joann Glasson Lessons. Monday, November 6 & 13. Click here for details.


New Lesson Series Tuesday Nights. Beginning November 28, Linda O’Malley will teach Overcaller’s Forcing Bids. Check flyer for details.


King of Prussia Bridge Club (KOP) Lessons. Details at [email protected].

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



“When it comes to finesses, a major philosophical difference separates the masses from the most accomplished players. Most players are eager to finesse. Finessing is simple and can provide immediate gratification. Experts do not like to finesse, and never have. Why? Finesses lose half the time. I compare the expert’s mindset with that of a professional gambler: Do you think he gets rich on 50-50 propositions?






From Points Schmoints!

by Marty Bergen

Deal of the Week

by Bucky Sydnor

([email protected])




Hand Hog vs Good Partner - What's Your Style?



You are 1st seat, red vs white, and pick up:

♠K109842 K96 5 ♣KQ3


Your hand may be ace-less but with a 6-card spade suit and those kings, it is well worth opening. Your partner responds 2. (The opponents are silent throughout the auction.) With nice 3-card support for her you raise to 3. She responds 3♠. It’s your call.

1♠ – P – 2 – P

3 – P – 3♠ – P

?


At our table, North bid 4 and that ended the auction.



West led the A, which went 5, 4, 2. He considered leading hearts to cut down on the possible diamond ruffs in Dummy, but his partner had (mistakenly) suggested a club switch by playing the 4. If partner did indeed hold the ♣A, and since it was likely to be West’s last time on lead, an immediate club shift through Dummy’s KQx could be important. After the club shift, Declarer won the ♣A in hand and led a heart to Dummy’s K. She next led Dummy’s high clubs pitching a diamond on the first one and a spade on the second one. She then drew two more rounds of trump ending in her hand and led the ♠J, finessing against West’s Q.


East won her ♠A, led the Q and then a low diamond to West’s K. Down 1.


How sad! The hand is cold for 11 tricks, not only in 4 but also in 4♠, as we will see below.


Let’s go back and look at Declarer’s hand just after Dummy has come down. It is important to realize that Declarer, as the master hand, has not 1 diamond loser, but 4. She has to determine how to get rid of three of them because she always has to lose the A. The simplest way is to win the ♣A, then ruff 1 diamond in Dummy. Next, when leading the ♣K & Q, she must pitch her other 2 diamond losers.


The way she played the deal, she failed to ruff a diamond in Dummy early on. Then she got rid of 1 diamond loser but wasted the chance to get rid of a second one on the second club honor. She mistakenly thought that pitching a spade would somehow lower her number of spade losers. When declarer and dummy hold the KJ109 of a suit between them, the maximum number of losers is 2, and on a good day when the Q is in the slot, this holding will only lose one, the A.


Consequently, Declarer sluffed a non-loser and held onto a loser when she played Dummy’s second club honor.


But there is yet another sad tale in this deal. North should not bid 4 but 4♠. The reason is simple: having 9 trumps is better than 8. From the bidding, North knows that partner has 5 hearts; she might have more, but she doesn’t act like it. Her 3♠ bid indicated she is happy to play in North’s spades. That strongly suggests she has 3 spades and only 5 hearts.


This situation should not be confused with the choice between a 4-4 fit and a 5-3 fit (or a 5-4 fit). In this situation, playing in the 4-4 fit is often better for two reasons. First, if the 4-4 suit is trump, it will often deliver an additional trump trick, e.g., 5 tricks, rather the maximum of 4 it is limited to when the 4-4 is a side suit. Secondly, the 5-3, as a side suit, will often allow declarer to pitch losers on it in the play. Mind you, that doesn’t always work out, but it often does.


Here the choice is between a 5-3 fit and a 6-3 fit. The 6-3 fit is safer, especially if the opponents can force Declarer to ruff their long suit.


Look at the deal with the hands rotated so that North, now as South, is declaring 4♠.



As you can see, declaring 4♠ is a cakewalk. Counting losers in this contract is trivial: 1 diamond and 1 or 2 spades. In the heart contract, Declarer can easily fail to account for all 4 diamond losers. In the spade contract, there is no such trap; North’s diamond losers are no longer a problem if South is declaring 4♠.


Being a nice partner has its merits. But guiding your partnership to the best contract will make you a great partner, though you might have to work on your debating skills if partner believes you’re doing it because you are a “hand hog”.


Most importantly, count all the losers in the master hand, plan how to take care of them, and then do so. It is all too easy to think “Oh those losers can be ruffed in dummy” and then fail to do so. I speak from experience.




Watch this space for future big game scorers.

It could be you and your partner!

Play often to improve the odds!

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


November Birthdays



Abell, Dick

Adelman, Nancy

Bauer III, William

Cieslinski, Pat

Dowling, Christina

Fryman, Maribeth

Garrity, Kay

Gewirtzman, Steven

Goldman, Bill

Goldman, Ellie

Meyers, Alan

Salasin, Sandra

Sigmund, Ruth

Stanley, Lee

Tolles, Leslie

Zelle, Jackie





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