Set 05Results

Set 05Results

Author: Larry Cohen

Date of publish: 7/29/2015

Level: Intermediate to Advanced

Results for Set 5
(for instructions, click here)

#1) East deals, both vulnerable

bridge card suit4
bridge card suitQ 10
bridge card suitA K 8 6 5 3
bridge card suitK 9 4 3
bridge card suitA K 7 5 2
bridge card suitA K 4 3
bridge card suit7 2
bridge card suitA 5

Deal 1 Scores:

6NT: 10
6bridge card suit: 9
5NT: 7
5bridge card suit: 5
4 MAJ: 2

East opens 1bridge card suit and West will likely respond 2bridge card suit, even if playing 2/1 GF. East rebids 2bridge card suit (careful not to jump-shift with this hand--which might even show a splinter bid in support of diamonds!). West now can bid 3bridge card suit, 3bridge card suit, or notrump (I prefer 3bridge card suit). At this point it is far from clear what should happen. East has lots of extra points, and would like to show them. A quantitative jump to 4NT would be useful, but many partnerships would interpret such a bid as Blackwood. Even after East shows slam interest, West is likely to reject. Slam is on 3-2 diamonds, so worth bidding--but not easy.

#2) West deals, both vulnerable, North bids 2bridge card suit(natural)

bridge card suitA 5
bridge card suitJ 10 7
bridge card suitA Q 10 7 5
bridge card suitK Q 2
bridge card suitK J 9 4
bridge card suit4 2
bridge card suitK J
bridge card suitA 10 9 5 3


Deal 2 Scores:

5bridge card suit: 10
5bridge card suit: 9
4bridge card suit: 8
4bridge card suit: 7
2NT: 5
3bridge card suit: 3
3NT: 2
4bridge card suit: 1

The 5-2 diamond fit is best (since bridge card suitJxxx of clubs offside might be picked up). If in range, West opens 1NT, and East must cope with the overcall. There are many possibilities -- see my article(s) on this: Notrump interference Intermediate or Advanced. East has to choose between a negative double, 3bridge card suit, or some form of lebensohl. The key is to avoid 3NT without the heart stopper--all depending on the methods.

#3) West deals, nobody vulnerable

bridge card suitJ 10 8
bridge card suit7 4
bridge card suitK 9 2
bridge card suitA K J 10 4
bridge card suitA 3
bridge card suit8 2
bridge card suitA Q 8 7 6 4
bridge card suitQ 8 3


Deal 3 Scores:

5bridge card suit/bridge card suit : 10
4bridge card suit/bridge card suit: 6
2NT: 3
3NT: 1

In real life, 3NT is the most-reached contract. In bidding practice, it isn't as likely to be the top spot. Here, the key is to avoid 3NT since hearts aren't stopped. West opens 1bridge card suit (nobody passes this hand in today's world, do they?). East responds 1bridge card suit and West will probably rebid 1NT to show 12-14 balanced (stoppers, schmoppers!). East is likely to raise to 3NT, so something must be wrong. Playing weak notrumps, the auction would go 1N-3N. Is there an intelligent way to avoid the doomed notrump game?  Some Wests might find a rebid other than 1NT, but I can't agree with such an action.

#4) East deals, nobody vulnerable 

bridge card suitQ J 10 7 6
bridge card suitJ 4 3
bridge card suitK J 4 3
bridge card suitA
bridge card suitA 2
bridge card suitK Q 9 7 6 5 2
bridge card suitA Q
bridge card suitJ 3


Deal 4 Scores:

6bridge card suit: 10
5bridge card suit: 6

East opens 1bridge card suit and West likely responds 1bridge card suit. East is now worth 3bridge card suit. West could use RKC, but that would be embarrassing if his side is off the cashing bridge card suitAK. A more proper bid would be 4bridge card suit. It is "too late" for clubs, so this should show a club control (Ace, King, Void, or singleton), heart support, and slam interest. It is important for partnerships to have some sort of agreement like "No new suits on the 4-level." This is a generalization, but on this auction (opener jump rebids his suit), 4-of-an-unbid minor should be a control-bid raise. Over 4bridge card suit, East might use RKC.  I expect most pairs to eventually Blackwood their way into the excellent slam.

Full Book by Larry Cohen with Bidding Practice and results/analysis