From Simplex
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| | + | ==== Result ==== |
| | + | * N-S's slam goes one-off if Eeast leads a trump, and West subsequently switches to a spade to break up the Double Squeeze. |
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Revision as of 07:42, 2 November 2012
Ref: R7#1
| Vulnerability: Neither
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| N
| E
| S
| W
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- ♠ A K 6 2
- ♥ J 6 5 3
- ♦ J 10 9 4
- ♣ 5
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- ♠ 9 7 4 3
- ♥ Q 7
- ♦ 2
- ♣ A 10 9 6 4 3
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- ♠ J
- ♥ A K 10 4 2
- ♦ A K 5
- ♣ Q J 8 7
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- ♠ Q 10 8 5
- ♥ 9 8
- ♦ Q 8 7 6 3
- ♣ K 2
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| Dealer: South (Both Pairs bidding Simplex)
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| -
| -
| 3♥ (1)
| Pass (2)
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| 3♠ (3)
| Pass (4)
| 4♣ (5)
| Pass
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| 4NT (6)
| Pass
| 5♥ (7)
| Pass
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| 6♥ (8)
| end
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Notes when South is Dealer:
- P18, P0: 18 HCP, bid your longest suit. With one less HCP, this hand would be a Bad Seventeen and better opened at the one-level.
- P1: 5-card suit but only 7 HCP.
- 5-13 points and a 4+ card suit. Better to change suit than show support immediately.
- P2, P17: With a 6-card suit and 6 HCP, East could have opened 2♣, but he is far too weak to overcall South's strong 3-level bid.
- If balanced with all unbid suits stopped, South could have bid 3NT. Disliking his singleton in North's suit, he bids his other 4+ card suit instead.
- North likes his singleton club opposite South's 4+ card suit, and shows slam interest with a simple Blackwood bid.
- South shows two aces.
- With one ace missing but around 12 points, North takes a punt on the slam.
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Result
- N-S's slam goes one-off if Eeast leads a trump, and West subsequently switches to a spade to break up the Double Squeeze.