Victor Champion Cup Festival

Readers who, by tomorrow, had not yet submitted and paid for their entries to this year's five-day Victor Champion Cup Festival of Bridge at the Moonee Valley Racecourse which ends on June 12, the King's Birthday public holiday, would originally have forfeited the early-bird discounts of $30 a pair and/or $60 a team. See, however, a "latest news" post at the event website that, inter alia, extends the deadline until May 27. 

The above-named trophy is held for the ensuing year by the top-placed team (of four, five or six players) in a 10-round IMP-scored Swiss tournament of 14-board matches. An unusual aspect of today's deal, from last year's eighth round, is that it was nowhere tied. At least one IMP  and as many as 13 changed hands in each of the 25 matches.

At 32 of 50 tables spades became trumps.  Of 20 Norths in 4♠, which goes one down against double-dummy defence that must begin with any heart or the unfindable(?) K, two were instead allowed to make 11 tricks, 14 were content with being gifted the one trick they needed to bring their game contract home, and four duly conceded one down. Of other declarers who also amassed 10 tricks one, via presumably a misjudged "when in doubt bid one more" decision, was in 5♠. The rest, less frustratingly, were in unbeatable part-score contracts. 

At the other 18 tables West was always declarer and hearts were always trumps. Of six not unreasonable 5 phantom sacrifices, all unsurprisingly doubled, four were taken two down, one fared a trick better, the other a trick worse. Eight entirely accurate undoubled 4 saves all went one down as, somehow, did one of three 3 contacts. 

From the bridgebase.com archives one can download exactly what transpired in that round's single recorded match. After the diagrammed auction, Canberrans Peter Reynolds and David Hoffman defended as follows. The former led ♣Q to 9-2-3 after which came ♣8-10-J-A, 3-2-J-A, ♠A-3-2-4, ♠7-9-Q-6, ♠J-8-♣4-5, ♣5-♠5-2-♣7. At that point it was agreed that West's doubled 5 contract was two down for a NS table plus-score of    300. 

A four-bid auction (1♣-22S-4) in which 2 looks like a natural weak six-card jump overcall opposite which the tactical jump raise by Stephen Fischer (ACT) to 4, one level higher than the Law of Total Tricks would here suggest, was justifiable; prospectively by the favourable vulnerability and in practice by the ensuing play. That began ♠K-4-A-3, ♠7-9-10-6 ♣Q-9-2-A. On lead after trick three, declarer Pele Rankin (Qld) surrendered it with ♣3-8-10-J and regained it, in dummy, with ♣K-5-♠2-2. ♠8-6-5-♠5, ♣6-7-A-♣4, J-3-K then allowed her to concede one diamond trick and claim all the rest for a table-score of 50 to NS and a six-IMP pick up.

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