The district finals were held over the weekend in San Antonio. For the first time I got my dad to go to the club and qualify and was excited about playing with him. One of my dreams is to win a national with my father, it would make it that much sweeter.
The first session of the first day started out miserably. In our first 2 boards we missed two saves and after about 5 rounds it felt like we were having a 20 % game. It's important in these situations to remember that there is a lot of boards left and just to play normally. Towards the middle of the session things finally started going our way and we were getting hot. We ended up with a 55 % game, not horrible but not great either. Considering our start, though, I would have been happy with average.
The second session was uneventful; we just made too many costly mistakes. We had opportunities and let them pass us by. We ended up with an average game. This meant we qualified in 8th position out of 14. The two pairs that were leading had big carryovers, and everyone else would have very little. There was a 2 board max carryover and we got 1/3rd of a board. This put us at a disadvantage but the main thing was we made it to day two.
In day two it is time to take a few more risks. Instead of trying to be in the top half, you're trying to be in the top 3 out of 14 in a good field. Without much carryover you need two good sessions to achieve this. Our first session started out amazingly well. We were getting gifts left and right. Towards the middle bad things started happening, and we didn't seem to be playing as well as we could. We were getting zeroes and they were killing our score. On the last round we had a misunderstanding and bid a grand on a finesse which was....on...whew. Rather be lucky than good. We ended with a 55 % game but a 70 % was literally in reach. I looked at our scores and noticed we had 5 zeroes in 26 boards. That is just way too many. There was good news and bad news with the rest of the people's scores. Jim Griffin/Ken Schutze and Georgianna Gates/Gus Plate both had huge games. They were about even and 2 boards ahead of the rest of the field. Both pairs are very good and very experienced so I didn't expect to be able to catch them. After that there were about 4 pairs very close in score fighting it out for third with everyone else being outside contenders. We were one of those 4 pairs, so if we had a good night session we would probably make it.
The mentality in the final session was just to play tough and not give anything up. Our style is very active so we're used to more bottoms than most but we knew we had been playing softly and doing things we shouldn't have. In the fourth session we finally brought our A games. Our luck was not as good as before but we had some cards and made the best of them. We ended up having a 57 % game which was surprising, it felt much better. In a good field sometimes good games are less good than they feel and bad games also less bad than they feel because there is less variance in skill and actions taken. I wasn't sure if 57 % was going to cut it, but unbelievably both of the pairs that were leading had games in the low 40's. I actually thought we might have won. We ended up second, losing by 1.4 matchpoints to Shawn and Joe Quinn.
There were a few interesting hands. One hand I had
RHO opened 1
Another hand my partner made a good bid. He held
I opened 1
You should know my exact high cards. I must have the AQ of hearts, A of clubs (2 with) and the KQ of diamonds (7
There was a very interesting 3N hand against Griffin/Schutze, but I'll leave that for tomorrow's post.
Over 5NT, I think 6D then 7D should have shown KQxxx and that 7D right away showed KQJxx, a crucial distinction at matchpoints in case partner has Ax! I have heard people say to bid to the 7 level directly if you are going at all so partner doesn't hang you by signing off slowly, but he should have worked out what to do over 6C and 6D before he bid 5NT, so I don't buy that.
ReplyDeleteA lot of neat distinctions like that can be made over 5NT. For example, I think 6C then 7D over 6H shows KQ of diamonds and K of clubs. You would pass 6H without the diamond Q since if all partner needed after 6C was the diamond K he would have bid 6D. 6D then 7H would show the diamond K but deny the Q, and show extra trump length to justify the grand slam bid (no other kings so what else can it be?) So if you bid that you would specifically have had x KQxxxx KQxxx A (no diamond jack or you could bid 7NT yourself!)
Thoughts from our esteemed Lall?
I always have to post twice to correct the first post! Ignore my example hand, it doesn't exist since it contradicts my previous statement. Sorry I get brain-fried at work sometimes.
ReplyDeleteFunny you brought this up, I thought about it at the table and almost wrote about it. I knew partner would know that I did not have KQJxx because he could count my points, but I told him in standard I think 7D should show the jack. I agree with your thought had we not been playing a strong club.
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of jumping to 7D with DJ, and bidding slowly otherwise. Thank you Mr. Anonymous.
ReplyDeleteAgain, I cannot have the diamond jack. AQ of hearts, A of clubs, KQ of diamonds=15. That is my maximum.
ReplyDeleteYour point about "respecting the field" is
ReplyDeletea good one. We bid 1H-2NT(strong raise)-3D
(length)-3H(stronger than 4H)-4NT-5C(0/3)-7H. I think partner should
have bid 7NT, but he hadn't played in a
good pair event in a very long time, and
decided that 2210 would be a good score -
it was only average.
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