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Hand of the Week09/18/19

I had a difficult time selecting a hand this week. We seemed to find ourselves in the same situation over and over. Our opponents made an unusual call and then benefited from it. On hand #22 both opponents made an unusual call, but I don't think that either affected the outcome much.

Board #22
East dealer
East-West vulnerable
  
 North
K 10 9 7 5
6 3 2
A J 10 7 6
——
 
West
Q J 8
Q 5 4
——
Q 10 9 8 6 4 2
 East
6 4
10 9 8
K 4 3
K J 7 5 3
 South
A 3 2
A K J 7
Q 9 8 5 2
A
 
    
SouthWestNorthEast
P
133P
4P4P
4P5P
6PPP


I was sitting North as usual. We sit this way to make it a little easier for Ken to perform his roll as director.

South opened his five-loser powerhouse 1. West pondered for a minute or two before playing the 3 card. I am a very aggressive when it comes to preempts. However, I do not think that I would have ventured this bid when our side was vulnerable, and I held only a bunch of quacks.

My hand only contained eight points, but I loved it. I took advantage of the opportunity to show my spades before supporting diamonds. The corollary to the LAW says that East should bid 5 or even 6 if she was fairly certain that West actually had seven clubs. She passed, a call that I would not even have considered.

South cue bid his A. I raised diamonds. He showed his A. I bid diamonds again. He tried the slam in diamonds. If West had held the K, or either opponent had held the queen-jack doubleton in spades, we would have triumphed. It was about 50-50.

Most of the time it would be folly to try for slam with only 26 points, but the opponents' club and heart honors were irrelevant.

If West had not preempted, I think that we would have had a similar auction, something like this:

SouthNorth
11
23
34
55
6 


2 is a reverse. The 3 bid shows support for diamonds. It is also a game force. If North wanted to show a weak hand with diamond support, he would bid 2NT[1] first.

The play would be the same, although declarer would assume that the clubs would probably split 6-6.

And what if East had bid 5? South might have passed, but I would certainly have bid 5. The only question is whether South would bid 5 (hooray!) or 6 (boo!).


[1]  This is one of the many applications of the lebensohl convention. The 2NT bid asks partner to bid 3. The next bid, in this case 3, is weaker than if it had been billed directly. This is a warning to the opening bidder that (despite the reverse) their side may not have game.