Return to godofthemachine main page

Home -> Gee Chronicles -> Hand Archive
About
Archives
Baseball
Contact
CVS
DO IT!
Gee Chronicles
Hall of Reciprocity
Pledge of Quality
Webmaster
What Time Is It?

THE GEE CHRONICLES

Main
Ask Dr. Robert
Honor Roll
News
Stats
Table Talk
Who's the Captain?
WWGD

BRIDGE

Aces on Bridge Archives
ACBL
Thomas Andrews
Bridge Forum Archives
Bridge Matters
Bridge Plus
Bridge World
Fifth Chair
Gee Chronicles
Jeff Goldsmith Archives
Great Bridge Links
House of Cards
IMP Bridge
Internet Bridge Archive
Karen's Bridge Links
Kibitzer
OKBridge
Richard Pavlicek Archive
Swan Games
WBF

Counting, Again

E/W xx-glorious
N/S nikkos-Gerard

None Vul
IMPs
Dealer: South
S K 10 5 4
H Q 2
D 10 9
C A 10 7 6 2
Lead: H5
S J 9 8 3
H A 7 6
D A 6 2
C Q 9 4
[W - E] S A Q 7
H J 8 4
D K 8 7 5 3
C 5 3
  S 6 2
H K 10 9 5 3
D Q J 4
C K J 8

West

1 C
Pass
North

Pass
Pass
East

1NT
South
Pass
Pass

Given a heart lead, can you find a plausible line on which 1NT makes 3? How about a line on which it makes at all?

Glad you asked. Declarer ducks Gee's heart lead to nikkos's Q and wins the return with the HA. There is now one heart left that Gee can't see, the J (which declarer obviously has, but it doesn't matter). I mention this advisedly. Declarer plays a low diamond from dummy, and ducks the 10 from nikkos, which Gerard, apparently in no hurry to run his hearts and with no certain outside entry, lets hold. No harm done, as nikkos finds the club shift, won by Gee with the K. And now the coup de grace: the H3! Declarer gratefully takes the HJ and runs the diamonds. Nikkos discards his club winners and eventually has to lead a spade when in with the CA, giving declarer nine tricks. It isn't every day you see ten defensive tricks compressed to four. After the hand Nikkos asked Gerard why he didn't return a club. "You didn't play a club until trick 4," said Gee.

Comments

And clearly no reason but Nikkos' late play of a small club (rather than the pedestrian play of returning partner's opening lead suit when he could have shifted to a club at trick two) can justify a SIX-trick compression, surely a hands-down winner in any Compression Play of the Year contest, and on a par with Kantar's great coup of going down in 3NT with 31 HCPs between his hand and dummy's.

O_Bones 7.08.02 9:08 PM EST

We have over 200 people that are not life masters in our local bridge club, 80 that started duplicate 2 years ago in Easybridge. Every one of these people knows to take their tricks when they can. But then again, not one of them has read Gerard's book yet. Maybe once they read that book they will learn to defend as eloquently as this hand was defended.

Leah 7.09.02 6:19 PM EST

© 2002-2003 by Aaron Haspel. All rights reserved.

Please add any comments here. Read the policy first.

Email (required):
OKBridge name (optional):