Set 06Results

Set 06Results

Author: Larry Cohen

Date of publish: 8/31/2015

Level: Intermediate to Advanced

Results for Set 6

 
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#1) East deals, neither side vulnerable

bridge card suitA K Q
bridge card suitQ 9 8 5 4
bridge card suit10 9 8 4
bridge card suit2
bridge card suit10 8 7
bridge card suit2
bridge card suitA K 5 3
bridge card suitA Q 10 8 5

Scores for Board 1:

3bridge card suit:10
4bridge card suit:9
5bridge card suit: 7
2NT: 6
3NT: 3

What should East open? My preference is 1bridge card suit so that I am prepared to bid 2bridge card suit next (lying slightly about the minor-suit lengths). The alternative of opening 1bridge card suit and telling some other lie with my rebid is less appealing. After 1bridge card suit-1bridge card suit-2bridge card suit, I expect West would bid 2NT and East would pass or raise to 3NT. After a 1bridge card suit-1bridge card suit start, I suppose East would lie with 2bridge card suit or 1NT. None of these auctions seem headed towards diamonds. Yes, it could start: 1bridge card suit-1bridge card suit-2bridge card suit-3bridge card suit.   No game is good, thus the scoring as shown.

#2) West deals, neither side vulnerable

bridge card suitA K 4
bridge card suitK
bridge card suitA K 8 7 6
bridge card suitQ 9 8 3
bridge card suitJ 5 2
bridge card suitA J 10 9 5 3
bridge card suitQ J 10 2
bridge card suit--


Deal 2 Scores:

7bridge card suit:10
6bridge card suit: 8
6bridge card suit: 5
5bridge card suit: 3
5bridge card suit: 2
3NT: 2
7bridge card suit: 1

After 1bridge card suit-1bridge card suit, I suspect most Wests would choose 2NT. No, this usually doesn't contain a singleton, but at least the singleton is the king and in partner's suit. The 2NT rebid gets the 19 HCP off opener's chest and feels more descriptive than a huge underbid of 2bridge card suit (or misleading 3bridge card suit). After 2NT, East can bid 3bridge card suit, forcing. West can bid 3bridge card suit (where he lives) and East might bid only 4bridge card suit next. Still, West should head towards slam with his great red-suit cards. He will rightfully be concerned about a club control. Maybe it goes: 1bridge card suit-1bridge card suit-2N-3bridge card suit-3bridge card suit-4bridge card suit-4bridge card suit-5bridge card suit... that leads to at least a small slam. Kudos to any pair who reached 7bridge card suit. Nobody said these deals were easy.

#3) East deals, North-South Vulnerable, South bids 3bridge card suit

bridge card suitA Q
bridge card suitA J 10 9
bridge card suitJ 10 8
bridge card suit10 8 7 6
bridge card suit5
bridge card suitK Q 4
bridge card suitA K 9 6 2
bridge card suitA Q 4 2

Deal 3 Scores:

6NT: 10
6bridge card suit: 8
6bridge card suit: 7
6bridge card suit: 5
5NT: 5
5bridge card suit: 4
5bridge card suit: 3
7bridge card suit: 2
5bridge card suit: 1

Assuming 2 spade tricks (likely), 6NT requires declarer to win either a diamond or club finesse for 12 tricks (at least 75%, probably more on the auction). Other slams are also decent propositions. After 1bridge card suit (3bridge card suit), I think it is more practical for West to try 3NT as opposed to a negative double. East now has many options: Pass, 4bridge card suit, 4NT (Quantitative), or 5NT (Pick-a-Slam). Since Pass and 5NT are at opposite extremes, I like the middle courses (4bridge card suit or 4NT). West might upgrade his great spots and treat the bridge card suitAQ as bridge card suitAK to accept an invitation.

#4) South opens 1bridge card suit, Both vulnerable, North bids 3bridge card suit (weak)

bridge card suitA Q 5
bridge card suitA 6 4
bridge card suitQ
bridge card suitA K J 10 9 4
bridge card suit10 6 4 3 2
bridge card suitK 7 3 2
bridge card suit9
bridge card suit6 5 3


Board 4 Scores:

4bridge card suit: 10
3bridge card suit: 8
4bridge card suit: 7
5bridge card suit: 5
Slams: 1

After South's 1bridge card suit, West is too strong to overcall 2bridge card suit, so he should double. The preemptive 3bridge card suit comes back to West, who should double again. East might bid only 3bridge card suit and buy it there. He could make a bigger bid (maybe 4bridge card suit) which could lead to 5bridge card suit (which needs a fair amount of luck). No game is great--and nothing is clear. So, why is this deal included? It comes (as do most of these) from the Becker Archives--maybe Mr. Becker knows something I don't know.

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