North Penn Bridge Bulletin

Greetings to the

North Penn Bridge Community!

Week of 02/05/2024

From the Club Manager

Dave Dodgson



Club under Construction. As I write this on Saturday, the installers are at the club putting in new carpeting and flooring in the bathroom and kitchen areas. We hope you like the results. Please excuse the temporary turmoil and thanks to those who helped make it happen.


Wednesday February 7 Four is Enough Game. Please sign up and see Pat Andrews if you need a partner.


Wednesday February 14 Valentine’s Day Extravaganza.


  • 9:30 a.m. Shuffle and Deal. If you Stay and Play in the afternoon, your card fee will only be $6.


  • 11:30 a.m. Lunch consisting of sandwiches, sides and desserts. All are welcome.


  • 12:00 noon Open game. This is a Royal STaC event, awarding gold, red, silver and black points. You can win big across the entire unit!


  • 8:00 p.m. Live onstage performance of “Love Letters” featuring Susan Morse and her husband David at the Sedgwick Theater in Mt Airy. Click here for details.


Sectional Tournament at Clubs (STaC). February 12-16. Because it is a Royal STaC, you can win gold, red, silver, and black points.


Handicap Team Results. In an exciting contest where the top four teams were all within three victory points of each other, the team of Gail Kirrstetter, Jane Pellulo, Jack Carballo, and Tim Headley inched out the team of Al Fitzgerald, David Silberman, Ed Heater, and Michael Carver by a single point! Congratulations!

Partnership



We are in the process of re-activating our online partnership desk and will now be monitoring it on a daily basis. Please use it for requests for our Open games; partner requests for Tuesday and Friday limited games should go directly to Mitch Snyder.


If you are in need of a partner for a Monday, Wednesday or Thursday Open game, please email [email protected]. We will do our best to match you up with others who are looking for someone to play with.

Upcoming Tournaments



February 11 at 3:30 p.m. - District 4 Online Tournament. Half red and half black points will be awarded.


February 12 - 18 STaC week.


February 23 - 25 the Wilmington Sectional.

Education



Sunday Shuffle and Deal. 12 noon to 2:00 p.m


Joann Glasson’s Classes Return. Joann’s next two zoom lessons are Monday, February 19 and Monday February 26 at 10:00 a.m. Click here for details.


King of Prussia Bridge Club Lessons. For lesson details go directly to the Latest News item on their website: https://www.bridgewebs.com/kop.

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



“Tips to Avoid Mistake 13

(Bidding the wrong slam)


  • It is often better to bid 6NT instead of six of a suit, particularly when you have a high point-count.
  • In 6NT you may succeed when the trump suit that you would otherwise have chosen happens to break badly. You will also avoid the risk of an adverse ruff.
  • When you have a choice of two trump suits in a small slam, consider which one may protect a king from the opening lead.
  • 5NT is no longer used to ask for top trump honors (since the advent of RKCB.) Use it to carry a ‘pick-a-slam’ meaning.”





From 52 Bridge Mistakes to Avoid

by David Bird

Deal of the Week

by Rex Saffer





Kling Firmly to Good Advice



Introduction


Auctions beginning with one of a minor and a response of one of a major are quite common. With minimum values and 4–card support, opener raises to two of the major. With a balanced minimum and three or fewer cards in responder’s suit, opener often rebids 1NT. But as Australian expert Ron Klinger advises (paraphrasing Tip #8 in his magisterial 100 Winning Duplicate Tips),


“At pairs choose a suit contract when your combined count is up to 21 HCP, but be happy to play in 1NT with 23–24 HCP together.”


When the deck is split evenly between the two sides, 1NT is not as safe as we might hope. Since responder may have as little as 6–7 HCP opposite a dead minimum opening hand, the deal could well play and score better in a suit contract, even if only in a 5–2 or 4–3 fit.


The Deal of the Week


Our Deal was played in a recent F2F game at a nearby Club.



The Auction


West held undistinguished values but had enough to open 1 in second seat. With a silent “phooey”, North passed in tempo and East responded 1. Some South players might have stuck in a 1♠ overcall, but neither opponent had yet limited their hand strength, and a Pass seemed prudent. West rebid 1NT and that ended the auction.


At another table our East player paused for reflection after West’s rebid.



How many cards in responder’s major does opener’s 1NT rebid guarantee? In your author’s partnerships, there is agreement that it shows at least two cards in the suit, or very infrequently a singleton ace or king. The E/W pair at this table had that understanding, and since the top two heart honors were visible, East could rely on a 5–2 heart fit at worst.


With an invitational hand, East could have rebid 2♣, New Minor Forcing, but with a mediocre 10 HCP, which would play better or more safely, 1NT or 2? In notrump there is no outside entry in the East hand, and while declarer may be able to establish the heart suit, there is no sure way to get back there to enjoy the long suit winners. East corrected to the 8–trick heart partial and played it there.


The Play of the Hand(s)


At our first table, the favorable 3–3 split establishes four accessible heart winners, with decent prospects in diamonds and the two black kings for three more tricks. But having carefully attended to the auction, North considered that South might hold spade length and values and began the demolition of declarer’s house of cards by leading a devastating Q. When the dust settled, declarer had taken just five tricks for –200. Click here to view or play the deal in the BBO Handviewer. Use the Next button to advance trick by trick or the Play button to choose your own cards and explore alternate lines of play.


At our second table, South led a passive 8 against East’s 2 contract. North won the Q, cashed the A, and continued the 9 to dummy’s king (suit preference for spades). Declarer led a heart to the jack and queen, and when South returned the 7, declarer guessed wrong and ducked. North won the Q, returned a spade to South’s ace, and ruffed the third spade. Declarer took the remaining tricks but went down two for the same –200. Click here to view or play the deal in the BBO Handviewer.


Closing Thoughts


Dear Reader, the next time partner opens one of a minor and rebids 1NT, carefully estimate the combined HCP range of the two hands. If it seems that our side holds only about half the points in the deck, then with a 5–card major and assurance that partner will not rebid 1NT with a stiff in our suit, consider playing in the major in no worse than a 5–2 fit. With no 5–card major in the responding hand, if there is a 4–3 or 4–4 fit in opener’s minor, favor that over 1NT.


At our second table, South paused to consider the spade position after winning the Q. Where was the K? If partner had it, it would always score. But if declarer had it North surely held the queen, and underleading the ace would subject declarer to a difficult decision. Declarer could have saved a trick by putting up the king, but who among us would have considered that or had the courage for it?


Although in this Deal the outcomes at our two tables were the same either in hearts or notrump, if North had not signaled for suit preference on the third round of clubs against 2, South might never have led one, and declarer likely could have held it to down one for –100. A small improvement, to be sure, but one worth noting in support of Klinger’s Tip.


Finally, although N/S can post positive scores in a club (+90), spade (+110), or notrump partial (+90), no plausible auction can get them to any of these after West opens 1. They do at least as well or better defending against an E/W heart or notrump partial.


All the best,

Rex




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


Results of NPDBC Online Games on BBO


Info about online games on NPDBC website


NPDBC Home Page


Archived NPDBC Newsletters


ACBL Home Page


BBO Home Page


February Birthdays



Bassman, Patricia

Bishop, Carole

DePaul, Leah

Guiser, Scott

Hino, Marlene

Parke, Nancy

Snyder, Neil

Sydnor, Bucky

Watters, Elaine

Woodbury, Virginia (Ginny)


North Penn Duplicate Bridge Club
(215) 699-4932
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