Gulf News

Another milestone is reached and passed

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First, look at today’s deal and auction. Can you think of a rational explanatio­n for the bidding, especially by South? Amazingly, this is my 8,000th column. To show that you never stop learning at this game, I had another new bridge experience on August 15, when I had a really enjoyable evening playing bridge at the Portland Club in London, as the guest of Stephen Richards. At the Portland, no convention­s are allowed, not even Stayman or Blackwood. You may use takeout doubles, but bidding a new suit requires four cards in it, and there are no cue-bids or control-bids. A one-no-trump opening shows 12-14 points, and twobids are strong. If a one-level contract is passed out undoubled, it is conceded, the cards are stacked, and they are dealt in groups of five and three — a goulash. I sat East on this goulash. The bidding sounded more and more weird to me because I had forgotten that partscores carried over. (I last played bridge where that was the case perhaps 40 years ago.) On this deal, North-South had 60 on, so two spades was game. Hence South’s strange-looking pass at that point. But he made up for it later when my partner pushed all the way to the five-level. If I had been West, I think I would have led the heart ace, hoping partner had a singleton, but here it did not matter. We could take only my partner’s aces, so they made a vulnerable game for 650 points. If you would like a fun but slightly frustratin­g evening, play under the Portland rules.

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