Tuesday 14 December 2021

Space Odyssey by Foxymoron

The Woodberry Bridge Club used modern technology to play in the 2001 US Nationals, and scored in a field of people they had never met. In 2001 there were several thousand tables in the US, so the scores were indeed indicative of how well you did. They will be on the Woodberry website in a couple of days.

There was one grand, on board 4, and it was a tricky one to play:


Richard and Debbie had the misfortune to see the Robot and Sam Nim reaching grand here, with East reversing and then bidding Key Card Blackwood. On the diamond lead, Debbie covered so that was that, but I think the Robot would have played the simple line of ruffing the third spade and made anyway. It is somewhat better than Hal was as you can see.

Reaching 7H is not easy. Richard Pavlicek recommends the uncontested auction 1D-1H-2C-2S-3H-4NT (simple Blackwood!; it was in 2001 and probably in 2010, the year we made contact)-5D-5NT-6D-7H. But it is easy with hindsight. And how do you play it? Well on say the QS lead you cash a top trump and discover the bad break. Now you can ruff a spade in dummy for your 13th trick, but that might not work as you might be overruffed. Or you can play the club-spade squeeze, and that does not work. Or some double squeeze. So many lines. If you made 7H you would get a top - in 2001, in 2010 or in 2021. And 7NT does not make.

And you can view all the hands at one of these links, depending on your browser security:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/6gv32nsd7tajxzq/7u01.pdf?dl=0
https://tinyurl.com/kynnuvja

All three seem to work. The last is presented nicely.

And the full results at the Woodberry, laboriously compiled by scorer Nigel Freake, are at:

https://tinyurl.com/3mvt9b82



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