Sunday, 24 June 2012

King's Cup, Bangkok

A diversion from bridge after all the European action. One of the reasons that I've been able to follow and commentate on the bridge in Dublin is that LotG has been off on her travels to Asia.

She has been playing in the King's Cup in Bangkok, the most important Scrabble tournament in even years when there is no world championship.

Prize giving
And she has pulled off a stunning victory!

LotG and the winning board
The format of the event is a 29-round Swiss tournament followed by a best-of-three final for the top two finishers. Thacha (THA) established a good lead in the Swiss and qualified for the final with two rounds to spare. LotG was in the chasing pack and effectively started playing knock-out in the final two rounds. But she had two good wins and was into the final.

LotG and Thacha (THA) at the end of the match
The best-of-three final has an unusual format: win the first two games, otherwise it is aggregate score over all three games. But Hels won the first two to win the title.

LotG looking smart as she is presented to the Princess on Friday.
For bridge players it is worth considering the effort that is demanded from the world's best Scrabble players compared to the Scottish bronze-medal winners. Coyle and Matheson played 208 boards over eight days in Dublin; LotG played the equivalent of 248 boards over four days, and she never had the advantage of relaxing as dummy on a quarter of the hands.

All photographs courtesy of John Chew.

Full details and more photographs on John Chew's web site.

Saturday, 23 June 2012

Bronze medal winners

Scotland Senior Team (photo courtesy of Anne Symons)
Congratulations to Harry Smith (NPC), John Matheson, Willie Coyle, Derek Diamond, Victor Silverstone, Iain Sime and John Murdoch on winning the bronze medal in the European Team Championship Senior Series.

This is the first Scotland team to win a medal at these championships, a terrific achievement (although Scots have won medals as part of Great Britain teams prior to 2000). This performance has earned Scotland a place in the World Team Championships in Bali next year and I hope that the SBU and selectors give this team first refusal for the right to compete for the d'Orsi Senior Bowl.

It was an exciting final match. Scotland started in second place but, with third-placed Poland beating leaders France heavily, all three teams were suddenly very close. The first eleven boards were actually fairly boring, but the final five were all exciting and Scotland fell down to third place when two slam swings went against them.

Even though I'm sure this was a disappointing finish, in the context of the entire tournament this is a wonderful  performance by the team. I must admit that they have impressed me. When I first saw the teams I thought that they stood an outside chance of sixth place. Then I saw most of the team play in the Senior Camrose and mentally relegated them to mid-table as their performance was so poor in a very weak field. But they have really upped their game for this championship and fully deserve their medal.

I know that the players have been supported all the way by their captain. Actually it seems that he has supported, cajoled, threatened and, frankly, bullied them over the past few months to train and practice, involving numerous BBO matches. All of us who know Harry will know that this will have been done with a bubbly enthusiasm and I hope that he is buying the bubbly this afternoon!

The team will move on to Lille, with Brian Short and Alan Goodman replacing Derek and Victor. The competition will be tougher, especially with the Americans there, but for the first-time ever a Scotland team will be going to the Olympiad with expectations and under pressure to medal. Not a situation many would have expected eleven days ago.

Hopefully will have some photos early next week.

Friday, 22 June 2012

Dublin Day 10

Lots of flat boards on a swingy set was a feature of the seniors performance against Bulgaria, but scoring forty-one imps on three boards led to an excellent 21-9 VP that took them into second place. Then the team demolished Spain to get a maximum win and finally a 19-11 VP against Estonia.

This excellent performance leaves the team in second place with one match to play, 12 VPs behind France but 14 VPs ahead of Poland and 15 VPs ahead of Belgium. A draw against Netherlands will guarantee them  at least a silver medal but, as France play Poland, even a small defeat will ensure a place on the podium.

All the very best tomorrow morning to Harry Smith (NPC) and his team - you can follow the action live on BBO.

A well bid game and couple of partscore swings were not what Ireland were supposed to be getting and this held the Scottish women to an 18-12 VP win. Then a very disappointing finish as they lost heavily to Norway, leaving them in eleventh position.

Before the championships started I hoped that the women would finish in the top half. I thought this was a realistic target for them. Although they played weaker teams initially that inflated their score, it did put them into a position where solid results against the best teams would have left them contemplating a top six place. However having to play all these top teams in consecutive matches proved too much and they dropped to mid-table. I am sure though that they are completely gutted that they were not able to finish the job.

But on a positive note the team has improved significantly since the previous championships in Ostend and they will know that their target next time should be a top six position. If the pairs continue to improve and they can get more practice against decent teams, then they can become a real force. Now they go to Lille with Sheila and Maida replacing Fiona and Yvonne - a real bonus that there are at least four good pairs on which to build on.

Thursday, 21 June 2012

Dublin Day 9

Five slams in the first seven boards really tested who was awake in the seniors' match against leaders France and it was the Scots who were narrowly ahead, but two small swings to the French late on left our seniors trailing by eleven imps and a 13-17 VP defeat. However, after not conceding an imp to Bye, they trounced the 'Auld Enemy' for a 19-11 VP win.

The seniors lie in third place overnight but the chasing pack is close by. Tomorrow they play Bulgaria, Spain and Estonia, with the final match against the Dutch on Saturday morning.

The women started slowly against second-placed Turkey, but a run of fifty-six imps without reply put an end to the match as a competition. A final score of 67-18 imps was sufficient for a maximum to consolidate their mid-table position and probably end Turkey's gold medal aspirations. Unfortunately the team then lost heavily to Greece, almost as if both opponents today were at the opposite end of the table. The difference was that the Greeks made games that the Scots did not, whether by better play or stronger defence I do not know. The match finished 8-22 VP.

The women lie comfortably in ninth place, just in the top half. I know that this was a target for them so they will be keen to retain it tomorrow, when they finish with Ireland and Norway. Both these teams are in the lower half but have the ability to be dangerous if not consistent.

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

Dublin Day 8

The seniors had a long tough day but a successful one. A testing first set of boards was handled well by both teams leading to a 15-15 draw with Israel. Then they outplayed a strong Welsh team 23-7 VPs and finished by beating Denmark, who were a place above them at the start of the round. Some aggressive bidding from Sime/Murdoch and solid play from Coyle/Matheson earned them a 17-13 VP win.

Tomorrow they face France and England, possibly their toughest day, but they do get a bye in the middle.


The women are also back in action tomorrow and face Turkey and Greece. The Turks are currently lying second and will be a big test, but with the Greeks in the bottom quarter perhaps the opportunity to gain some easier victory points. But, as we all know by now, there are no easy opponents anywhere.

Intermission

With the open team coming home, a day off for the women, and only the seniors playing, some thoughts about the open team.

Commenting on the performance from afar is a little like being a kibitzer on BBO. Seeing all fifty-two cards makes everything clear and it is very easy to forget that the players are in a more difficult position. Although I do see many of the hands on BBO, it does not mean that the Scottish players are facing the same auctions, the same leads and the same defences. Basically I am guessing, based on their results, what is likely to be happening at the table itself. If any of the players wish to comment publicly or privately to me, I am very happy to correct any misconceptions I may have portrayed.

One point I do understand well is that the difference between the top teams and the rest is small, especially when it comes down to a single twenty-board match. You do not have to make many small errors, or misjudgements, to find yourself losing heavily.

And this appears to have been the problem for the open team. They have been playing to my expectations, just making the odd mistake too many and scoring poorly because of that. I have no doubt that they are all trying hard, but they lack the experience of continuously playing long matches against good opponents and getting punished for this. Small errors, and misjudgements, have been killing them. Although it is not the youngest open team we've seen, I doubt that stamina has been a problem, at least not in the sense that most would infer. But when every board is a battle, every mistake seems to cost imps, and you face tough decisions on most boards, it is a tiring experience. Coping with this day in and day out is what playing at this level requires and we, in Scotland, do not provide meaningful practice or training for this.

I do feel that this was the best team that was available. There is no pair from the (Euro or Camrose) trials who I'd want there instead and there is no doubt that this team is stronger than the one we are sending to Lille (luckily the opposition is not so tough). Open bridge in Scotland is not strong at this point in time and has not helped by many of the better players moving into the senior team (although I fear that they would not have improved the open performance by much). Perhaps it is time for a change to open-to-all trials and consider what Scotland wants to, and can, achieve at the Europeans. Time for youth? Coaching for our stronger pairs?

So why are the women doing considerably better than the open team? I think there are a few reasons.

Firstly the standard in the women's game is considerably lower. Although there are some professionals, hardly any in the women series would find a place in an open team. The Scotland Women's team is not much weaker than the Open team (if at all, I hear them say), so it is no surprise that they finish higher in a weaker competition. Secondly the team has more established partnerships and is a real 'team', rather than a collection of three pairs. I know, and more importantly so do they, that they are very supportive of each other. No-one is going to berate you when you lose -1100 on a part-score. You may not believe that this is important, but I think it is far easier to play the next board when you know you are not going to be crucified for your previous decision.

As regular readers will know, I am not a great fan of butler scores. But in the Europeans you play enough boards and the 'field' is so strong that they do give an indication of where you stand as a pair. Of course, some pairs always play against the 'strong' teams, but in the open everyone is strong relative to Scotland.

Our best open pairs are clearly not good enough. This is the third European in a row where the team has finished in a disappointing position, and even the mid-table position in 2006 was built on beating minnows who have improved immeasurably since while Scotland has not.

Currently we are among the weakest open teams in Europe. Does the SBU, and its members, want to do anything about it?

Tuesday, 19 June 2012

Dublin Day 7

The seniors seemed to take their time to wake up but scored forty-two imps in the second half against Turkey on their way to a 23-7 VP win. It was a very wild set of boards and they were on the right side of most of them. Then, apparently taking their siesta, they lost heavily to Italy. In their final match of the day I commented on John and Iain as they played a solid game against the Israelis: a tight match finished with an eight imps win for 17-13 VP. The team now lie seventh, only 6 VPs behind third at the halfway point.

Sweden, Wales and Denmark will provide another long day tomorrow. They will feel that this is a competitive day and a chance to shine.

The women did not cope with the wild first set as well as the seniors and had a winning draw against Spain. Then they lost heavily to a rapidly improving Italian team - it seems that Italy started poorly when their first four matches were against the Dutch, English, French and Swedish and have been zooming up the table ever since.

So the first poor day for the women but they have tomorrow off to recover. I predict they will be (i) in the gym/sauna (ii) lounging at the pool or (iii) shopping for shoes, but perhaps (iv) "all of the above" is closer to the mark.

Finally, the open team have finished. A good second half against Belgium earned them a 16-14 VP win but then, as I predicted, they found it difficult to score against Germany. Indeed, they were unable to double the five imps earned on the first board until the final board, going down by 23-7 VP.

The open team finished bottom of their group with just two wins from sixteen matches. Clearly a disappointing performance but the Europeans is a tough event and the scoreboard does tell the story. At such a time it is easy for the 'stay at home' experts and 'anonymous' to criticise the performance, but if you are so much better than our team, why are you not beating them in the trials?

My thoughts on their performance tomorrow.

Meanwhile Wales again suffered disappointment in the open qualification, failing to beat Switzerland in the final match. They started very well but their failure to beat any of the bottom three teams proved decisive. England finished second in this group and will be looking forward to the second round-robin.

Monday, 18 June 2012

Dublin Day 6

Against Ukraine the open team started and finished with swings in the wrong column as they fell to a 9-21 VP defeat. A similar performance against Turkey resulted in a 10-20 VP loss. The scorecard for the final match against Latvia looked like a tired performance, an early game swing negated by losses on almost all the other boards.

Belgium and Germany are the final two matches for the team tomorrow. They will be playing for pride against the Belgians but the Germans may need a good score to qualify, so the team will need be playing motivated opponents. Having played Piekarek and Smirnov in the Vanderbilt, I know that they are a really tough partnership to play against.

A fairly quiet set was punctured with moments of high excitement in the Swedish match, but the women got the best of it with a 19-11 VP win. The England match was like watching the football championships that some people think are the real Euros going on at the moment: a lot of action, brilliant goals, a few own goals too, and when the dust settled the narrowest of wins for the English. Both teams will feel that they had chances: Scotland to win the match and England to win it bigger. In the final match they faced a France team that played very well, particularly in the part-score area. Although I thought both pairs played well, imps drifted away at the end for a 9-21 VP defeat - earned more by the French than lost by the Scots.

After today's test the pressure remains on the women with Spain and Italy tomorrow. Both teams are in the lower half but can be dangerous, especially the Dano de Falco coached Italians.

The senior's first match, against Germany, was a fairly quiet set without the moments of excitement discovered by the women. Readers might like to infer something from this although, to be fair, the seniors only play sixteen boards and two of the women's double-imp swings were in the last four boards. In future championships it seems like all the teams will have the same length matches. Then they did the business by demolishing the Finns for a maximum win. In the final match three game swings, with two of them compressed into one board, at the start of the match was the difference between the teams as they lost 10-20 VP to Norway.

Turkey, Italy and Israel tomorrow may cause dangerously raised blood pressure in the senior camp. Three top teams and the Scots will have to be on their mettle to compete.

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Dublin Day 5

The open team started very strongly against Norway, twenty-four imps up after six boards. Unfortunately this was followed by a stream of imps in the wrong column and they fell to a 20-10 VP defeat. Tomorrow they face Ukraine, Turkey and Latvia - Turkey are running hot but the other two are mid-table teams fighting for the final qualifying spot.

I was commentating on most of the boards in the women's match. The difference between the teams was the Dutch pair of Simons and Pasman, who showed excellent judgement throughout and earned their team 20-10 VP win. Scotland now lies fifth.

England, Sweden and France provide a stern test tomorrow. I feel that the Scottish team, and I mean team, is playing well enough to compete with each of these teams with a reasonable chance of victory. The real test is facing them all on the same day and maintaining concentration throughout. These are teams who take advantages of mistakes and make few errors themselves, but this is the standard and aura that Scotland want too. Now is the time to earn it.

Two adverse grand slam swings in the first three boards left the seniors with a mountain to climb against Belgium. Both pairs showed tremendous resilience as they clawed back enough of the deficit for a 12-18 VP defeat.

Tomorrow Germany, Finland and Norway provide the examination. The Germans are always a strong team and, with the addition of the two doctors, will be a real challenge. Norway are only one victory point behind Scotland although, with Finland propping up the table, the two tougher matches are not consecutive.

A busy day for all our teams tomorrow.

Saturday, 16 June 2012

How many ....

... women can you get on a captain's bed?

Scotland Women's Team

Dublin Day 4

Predicting matches in the seniors is very difficult. Sponsors are more prevalent, but the number of open 'stars' joining the fray are increasing so the standard of the teams can vary a lot between championships. It is certainly a lot more competitive nowadays. But the Scots have started very well with the expected defeat of the Irish and an excellent 20-10 VP win against Poland. Very early days but they are currently third. Tomorrow they play the Belgians, the joint leaders after day one but only a single victory point ahead.

Both pairs seemed to play well for the women as they defeated Bulgaria comfortably, helped by an excellent grand slam bid by Liz and Sam (although, in the name of balance, they missed an easier slam later on). They suffered a setback in the afternoon with an 12-18 VP defeat by Germany. However all three pairs seem to be in form at the moment and this will give npc Brian Short a selection headache as the toughest opponents loom, but perhaps one that he cannot really get wrong.

The women take on Netherlands tomorrow, favourites for a podium finish. A chance for revenge for their encounter in Ostend two years ago.

Meanwhile the open team could do little right against Hungary and Italy and fell to heavy defeats.

Tomorrow they take on Norway, winners in 2008. The Norwegian team has lost its best two pairs and the team is not performing well, despite featuring three partnerships (and professional players) that would waltz into any Scottish team. Another sign of how tough life is at these championships and proof that Scotland needs more than one good pair to make a significant move up the table.

The schedule for all the teams continues to defy belief. Two matches on Saturday and one on Sunday, a time when you could play six matches with everyone in Europe able to watch. But no, let's not play bridge when people can watch, we'll wait until everyone is back at work. And with a single match on Sunday, one pair from every team will sit out the entire day but still have to turn up in the middle of the day just in case a team member is unwell. Bizarre.

Friday, 15 June 2012

Dublin Day 3

With Bye duly despatched in the morning, the women played out a high-scoring winning draw against Estonia. All the part-score swings went into the negative column but the majority of the double-digit swings in the plus column was enough to tie the match. The second match, against Austria, was a roller-coaster affair with plenty of double-digit swings. Too many, really! However when the roundabout stopped Scotland had scored thirty-two imps in the final four boards to win by twenty-one imps, or 19-11 VPs. The team lies in sixth place after seven of the nineteen rounds, but have yet to play any of the teams above them.

Bulgaria and Germany for the women tomorrow. Traditionally Germany compete with France, England and Netherlands for the medals, but with Sabine and Dani retiring from the women's game their team looks a lot weaker this year. The Bulgarian women are not as strong as their open team but give little away, so the team should be looking for an above-average return for the day to hold onto their position.

With three matches against mid-table teams, a big loss against Spain was a disappointing result first up. Speaking to one of the Spaniards afterwards, he said his opponents played poorly and without luck resulting in a maximum for him. I'll repeat myself often in saying how tough the competition is, and poor play is often accompanied by poor luck but, of course, the luck shares itself around in such a long event.

Then the team was quickly twenty imps down to Ireland. I was slightly worried that they'd just slide from here, but encouragingly they recovered to all square and it was only a late missed sacrifice that led to the 13-17 VP loss. Less than they would have been aiming for, but the team showed resilience. The final match of the day was against Portugal, who were propping up the table. and team eked out a four imps win. It would have been a large win if a 50% slam had come home, or if a poor slam by Portugal had failed, but perhaps saving these for the tough matches ahead.

It is half-way through for the open team as they are not going to finish in the top nine and qualify for the second round-robin. With the bottom four teams drifting away from the pack, their aim is probably to finish top of the little group.

Tomorrow they warm up with Hungary and then take on the might of Italy, hopefully on BBO Vugraph.

The seniors start tomorrow with two matches, the first against Ireland and then a match against Poland, probably the pre-tournament favourites in this series.

Thursday, 14 June 2012

Dublin Day 2

Missing a simple-to-bid slam was the high profile error but, much as I expected, the open team lost most imps in part-scores against the Bulgarians today. However it was a good performancel to hold them to 10-20 VPs. They followed this up with an excellent performance against group leaders, Israel, with only a late slam swing meaning a nine imps defeat (13-17 VP). A return of 23 VPs may not appear such a good result, but these are two of the strongest teams in the group. All of which meant it was a disappointment to lose to Lithuania by ten imps.

Spain, Ireland and Portugal for them tomorrow, all teams that they should feel that they can compete with. The Irish have been looking to repeat their silver medal from 2006 for some time now but have been practising hard on BBO, but they have not started well and perhaps home pressure is taking its toil. Mike Ash, in particularly, will be looking for revenge for our defeat by them in the Rosenblum in 2010.

I feel these three matches, together with the first on Saturday against Hungary, will go a long way to deciding the fate of the team in this championship. The team currently lies fourteenth, of seventeen, but has played three of the top teams. A stretch of matches against middle-ranked teams gives them the opportunity to move up the table and build up confidence for the tough matches ahead (Italy, Germany, Turkey). Now is their time!

A slam was the difference in the first match where the Poland woman dropped the singleton king of trumps offside to make the contract, leading to a 11-19 VP defeat for the women against the current leaders. They continued with their good form with a maximum win against Israel.  A very good day that consolidated their mid-table position.

Illness (food poisoning) has been affecting the team and they played four-handed today. Less of a problem with the current schedule of just two matches a day but they should be back to full strength tomorrow. I've recommended deep frying everything in future rather than trusting this foreign food.

The women have tomorrow morning off and then play Estonia and Austria, both mid-table teams at the moment. However a couple of my friends picked Austria to be a top-six finisher, so not a team to take lightly.

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Dublin Day 1

Belgium proved too strong for the women in the first match, beating them 21-9 on their way to the overnight lead. But Scotland bounced back in the afternoon to beat a good Danish team by 23-7 for a mid-table position. A good day. Tomorrow they take on Poland and Israel, two teams at opposite ends of the table but not an easy day. Although, as I'm sure we'll see, no days are ever easy!

Twenty-six imps down after three boards was not the best start against Sweden and it did not improve for the open team as they fell to a big loss. 'Bye' did not show up, so an 18-0 VP win in the middle match was followed by a 10-20 VP defeat against Greece. I saw that Piper/Wilkinson bid two good slams missed at the other table, but a couple of late game swings and imps dribbling away elsewhere - a slightly disappointing result.

Tomorrow the team start with Bulgaria and Israel, two teams who will qualify for the second round-robin and have Bali aspirations. Both score heavily and are very difficult to score imps against, so Scotland will do very well to emerge with a significant number of victory points. Their final match is against Lithuania, traditionally a weaker nation but one that I'm expecting to make a big improvement this time, but it will be still be a relief at the end of the day.

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Dublin Day 0

The Scotland Open team will start the championships tomorrow with a tough match against Sweden, a team expected by most to get a top six berth. Then there is a bye and then play Greece in the final match of the day. Hopefully the Greeks will still be moaning their loss in the football today, but otherwise they are a team with similar aspirations to Scotland so expect a tight game.

The Women start with a match against Belgium, who finished a few places above them last time. Their second match is against Denmark, who also finished well above them. The good news is that Scotland beat both these teams in Ostend and will be looking to repeat these victories, but in reality this is a tough first day and anything approaching average will be an excellent start.

Let the play begin!

The deadline for entries to my prediction competition has passed and you can see them on this page.

I will update this page during the competition based on the current standings, with the first update when the Open has completed the group round-robin qualifier.

Play in the Open and Women Series starts tomorrow.

Some statistics from the entries.

Favourites to finish in the top three places
OPEN
32 votes - Italy
27 Monaco
22 Netherlands
7 Poland

WOMEN
31 France
26 England
23 Netherlands
8 Sweden

SENIORS
27 Poland
21 England
15 France
12 Italy

Favourites to finish in the top SIX places earning a trip to BALI
OPEN
32 Italy
31 Netherlands
30 Monaco
27 Poland
19 Israel
19 Sweden
9 France

WOMEN
32 England
32 France
30 Netherlands
28 Sweden
19 Poland
17 Italy
11 Germany

SENIORS
29 France
29 Poland
28 England
27 Italy
24 Germany
22 Denmark
9 Netherlands

Monday, 11 June 2012

Disappointment

Congratulations to Mike Best and his team (Liam Sheridan, Andrew Scott, Kevin Maddox, Mark Roderick) on winning the Silver Plate final yesterday, beating us by sixteen imps over forty-eight boards.

It has been a long road for both teams, the competition running over eighteen months, and we both had long journeys to Welwyn Garden City Bridge Club for the final. Perhaps this was the reason that it was a scrappy match and both teams had plenty of chances to win, but in the end we took fewer of ours.

Thanks to Barbara and Derrick Kime who arranged everything at WGCBC, and the Herts and Suffolk teams who played their Eastern Counties League match alongside us and were far quieter than normal!

Now we wait for next season, although Anne and Sheila have to pick themselves up quickly as they fly to Dublin for the European Team Championships tomorrow. Good luck to them and all the UK teams.

Saturday, 9 June 2012

Three Days

Entries for my European Team Championships prediction competition have to be submitted before Tuesday. You can also enter and elect not to be eligible for a prize, as some have suggested that they'd prefer not to win :)

Details in an earlier post.

Please note that, following representations, I have decided to change the scoring system to the one used by Formula 1 when they last gave points to the top six drivers.

First place = 10 points
Second place = 6 points
Third place = 4 points
Fourth place = 3 points
Fifth place = 2 points
Sixth place = 1 point

for a maximum of 78 points.

If anyone wishes to change their entry then please email me.

Friday, 8 June 2012

Subbing

The Scottish teams have almost completed their preparations for the European Teams Championship that start in Dublin next week. Last night, at the behest of the Seniors NPC, I ran a four-team round-robin tournament - one day I hope BBO will support this directly but it was not too difficult as everyone ensured that they were at their keyboard at the start of each round.

When one of the players had to leave I was pressed into service for the last match. We did not know it but the match was even when the penultimate board arrived - a bidding test for the North-South pairs:


The same hand was played at all four tables and the first three bids were the same. I expect all the other North players considered three spades rather than three hearts, but like me rejected it as the hand was not really strong enough to force to game and, with the opponents silent, it sounds like partner has the suit.

Three of the South players continued with three spades. John Murdoch, playing with Iain Sime, bid four clubs and this hit the jackpot as Iain now just keycarded into the slam. Perhaps it showed shortage but it makes Iain's hand huge whether it shows a singleton or the king.

I considered cue bidding four clubs totally automatic and I was slightly surprised that my opponent signed off in four hearts immediately. Although partner probably has wasted spade values, I do have good controls and the three spades bid is showing slam interest.

More debatable is the decision to move over Cliff's four hearts bid. In the end I decided that the spade shortage and double diamond stop, the likely lead, was more valuable than the potential spade wastage and poor trumps. There was also the safety net that I had limited the hand with three hearts, so partner should have a fair idea of my hand. The fourth North decided not to proceed in the same position - a reasonable view but a losing one on this occasion.

The evening was won by the Scottish Seniors team, with everyone else in a bunch.

Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Seven days

Entries for my European Team Championships prediction competition have to be submitted in the next week. You can also enter and elect not to be eligible for a prize, as some have suggested that they'd prefer not to win :)

Details in an earlier post.