- Mr Bridge
Transcription
- Mr Bridge
BRIDGE Number One Hundred and Eighteen MAKE THIS CHRISTMAS ONE YOU’LL NEVER FORGET! Exclusive saver fares on four extraordinary Voyages to Antiquity Award-winning cruises aboard Aegean Odyssey V OYAGES TO A NTIQUITY www.voyagestoantiquity.com November 2012 CHRISTMAS CRUISE VIETNAM & THE JEWELS OF SOUTHEAST ASIA Join us on this celebration voyage from Singapore to Bangkok, and enjoy a Christmas you’ll never forget! NO SINGLE SUPPLEMENT † Fly to Singapore and enjoy time to explore and an included excursion of this dynamic City. Cruise to the beautiful island of Borneo and the Sultanate of Brunei, with its magnificent Royal Palace, and Kota Kinabalu in the state of Sabah. Relax on board as we celebrate Christmas Day sailing the South China Sea to Vietnam. Visit Nha Trang and Ho Chi Minh City where a warm welcome, fascinating history and spectacular scenery await. Your final destination is exotic Bangkok where you arrive in style as Aegean Odyssey sails up the Chao Phraya River to berth in the heart of the city. Aegean Odyssey – cruise in comfort, relax in style Carrying around 350 passengers, the atmosphere on board is relaxed with plenty of passenger space, a choice of restaurants (with open-seating dining) and generously-sized accommodations, plus the comfort and attentive service of boutique-style cruising. Add more time in Bangkok and visit Angkor Wat in Cambodia An optional 4-night package is available offering 3 nights in a 5-star hotel in Bangkok and 1 night in Siem Reap, Cambodia for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see the magnificent temple complex at Angkor Wat. Details on request. FARES INCLUDE: SIGHTSEEING EXCURSIONS AT ALL PORTS EXPERT LECTURE PROGRAMME WINE WITH DINNER & GRATUITIES ON BOARD EXCLUSIVE MR BRIDGE COCKTAIL PARTY SCHEDULED AIR & TRANSFERS PLUS MR BRIDGE SPECIAL FARES CALL ON 01483 489 961 ADD THAILAND, MALAYSIA & BURMA! Begin your voyage on our preceding sailing on December 6 and cruise to Kuala Lumpur, Phuket, Yangon (Rangoon), Penang and Malacca. This makes a magnificent 32-day Grand Voyage offering remarkable value and even greater savings. Please ask for details 10093 Thailand Bangkok Vietnam Nha Trang Cambodia Ho Chi Minh City Sihanoukville Gulf of Thailand Singapore Kota Kinabalu Bandar Brunei Seri Begawan BoRNEO/ malaysia DECEMBER 18, 2012 – 15 days from £2,850 DATE DEC 18 DEC 19 DEC 20 PORT Depart UK Arrive SINGAPORE SINGAPORE Embark Aegean Odyssey DEC 21/22 At Sea DEC 23 BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN Brunei, Borneo DEC 24 KOTA KINABALU Borneo DEC 25 Christmas Day at Sea DEC 26 NHA TRANG Vietnam DEC 27 HO CHI MINH CITY Vietnam DEC 28 HO CHI MINH CITY Vietnam DEC 29 At Sea DEC 30 SIHANOUKVILLE Cambodia DEC 31 New Year’s Eve at Sea JAN 1 ’13 BANGKOK Thailand Disembark Aegean Odyssey and transfer to airport for flight home ARRIVE DEPART overnight hotel 6.00pm 7.00am 7.00am 8.00pm 5.00pm 1.00pm 6.00pm 6.00pm overnight 6.00pm 6.00am 8.00pm 7.00am ACCOMPANIED BY MR BRIDGE HOST MR BRIDGE FARES* Standard Inside £2,850pp Superior Outside from £3,595pp Superior Inside from £3,095pp Deluxe Outside from £4,150pp Standard Outside £3,450pp Deluxe Balcony from £4,895pp * Prices shown are per person, single or double occupancy, include MR BRIDGE SPECIAL SAVINGS. †Limited availability on cabins with no single supplement. This offer is subject to availability, is capacity controlled and may be withdrawn at any time. BRIDGE PLAYERS: The bridge programme is completely optional and Mr Bridge passengers can participate as much, or as little as they wish. There is a supplement of £100 for those wishing to participate in the duplicate bridge programme. Singles are made especially welcome and a playing partner will always be found. V OYAGES TO A NTIQUITY www.voyagestoantiquity.com ABTA No.Y2206 BRIDGE Ryden Grange Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH ( 01483 489961 e-mail: bridge@mrbridge.co.uk website: www.mrbridge.co.uk Publisher and Managing Editor Mr Bridge Typesetting and Design Ruth Edmondson FEATURES 5 A DVERTISEMENTS Mr Bridge 2 Christmas in Vietnam and South East Asia 9 Bernard Magee says Run for Home 32013 Diaries Standard and Luxury 10 Julian Pottage says Opening 2♣ Often Means Five Quick Tricks and a Powerful Game Going Hand 3 Bridge Tie 4 Tutorial Software and QPlus 10 5 Just Duplicate Bridge 11 David Gold says Limit Your Hand 6 Christmas 2012 and New Year 2013 13 Bidding Quiz by Bernard Magee 16 Jeremy Dhondy says An Acol Two Shows Values, Not Just Eight Tricks 7 Mail Order Form 8 Cruise from Bali to Borobudur 12 Tips for Better Bridge 12 Bridge Events with Bernard Magee 19 Andrew Kambites says Lead an Unbid Suit 14 Mr Bridge Playing Cards Proof Readers Tony & Jan Richards Danny Roth Richard Wheen Hugh Williams 20 Mike Wenble says Force if You Know Where You are Going 14 Stamps Office Manager Jane Cavell 23 Bernard Magee at Haslemere DVDs reviewed by June Booty Events & Cruises ( 01483 489961 Rosie Baker Jessica Galt Rachel Everett Megan Riccio Sophie Pierrepont 15 Cruise from Bangkok to Singapore 21 Julian Pottage says A New Suit at the Three Level is Forcing 17 Cruise India to Luxor 22 Bernard Magee at Haslemere 2011/2012 24 Cruise Safaga to Oman on Minerva Bridge Tie £15 including postage & packing Clubs & Charities Maggie Axtell maggie@mrbridge.co.uk Address Changes Elizabeth Bryan From Mr Bridge ( 01483 485342 elizabeth@mrbridge.co.uk All correspondence should be addressed to Mr Bridge. Please make sure that all letters, e-mails and faxes carry full postal addresses and telephone numbers. 2013 Bridge Players’ Diaries 6 Tunisia 2012/3 14 Bidding Quiz Answers by Bernard Magee 18 Dave Huggett says Majors Before Minors Technical Consultant Tony Gordon Mr Bridge ( 01483 489961 www.mrbridge.co.uk Order Form on page 7 Page 3 Contents include ♦ Acol Summary by Bernard Magee. ♦ Guide to the Laws. ♦ Scoring Tables for duplicate and rubber bridge. ♦ Distributional odds. ♦ Hand patterns and fascinating figures. ♦ Cover colours: Sorry only red and navy blue remain in stock. ♦ All covers printed in gold-coloured ink. ♦ Individual diaries £6.95 each including p&p. ♦ Special concession to clubs and teachers. 10 for £35 and pro rata. £3.50 each inc p&p. ♦ Luxury version with super-soft kidrell cover, gilded page edges and a ball-point pen attached, in ruby red, navy blue or green. £14.95 each including p&p. See Mail Order Form on page 7. QPLUS 10 Really user-friendly bridge-playing software l Updated comprehensive manual £86 l Displays on HD screen l Supports large screens l Minibridge option l Extra 500 preplayed hands for teams making 5,000 in all l Extra 500 preplayed hands for matchpoint pairs making 4,000 in all BERNARD MAGEE’S INTERACTIVE TUTORIALS ACOL BIDDING l Opening Bids and Responses l Slams and Strong Openings l Support for Partner lPre-empting lOvercalls Openings and Responses l l Opener’s and Responder’s Rebids Minors and Misfits lDoubles lCompetitive l l New save match function l Save deals with automatic file labelling l Closed room – new button to view other table QPLUS TRADE-IN OFFER Return any QPLUS CD and booklet with a cheque for £35 and receive the very latest version of the wonderful QPLUS Bridge. Order with absolute confidence. ADVANCED DECLARER PLAY l Making Overtricks in No-trumps l Making Overtricks in Suit Contracts lEndplays l Contract £81 lSimple Trump Reductions & Coups l Playing Doubled Contracts l Safety Plays £96 Overcalls Establishment in No-trumps l Suit Establishment in Suits l Ruffing for Extra Tricks l Entries in No-trumps Defences to Other Systems l Misfits and Distributional Hands Drawing Trumps Lead vs No-trump Contracts l Lead vs Suit Contracts l Partner of Leader vs No-trump Contracts Using the Lead l Trump Control l Endplays & Avoidance l Using the Bidding DEFENCE l £76 lDelaying l l FIVE-CARD MAJORS & Strong No-Trump l Opening Bids & Responses l No-Trump Openings l Support for Partner l Slams & Strong Openings l Rebids l Minors & Misfits lDiscarding l Pre-empting l Defensive Plan l Doubles l Stopping Declarer l Overcalls l Competitive Auctions l Partner of Leader vs Suit Contracts lCount Signals lAttitude Signals the Hand l Defence to 1NT lTwo-suited Squeezes lCounting l Suit lHold-ups Strong Hands lDoubles lAvoidance lWrong Twos to Weak Twos over two years from version 9 l Advanced Basics l Weak Auctions lImprovement DECLARER PLAY l Basics lDefence £66 lNo-trump MORE (ADVANCED) ACOL BIDDING £76 lCounting the Hand £89 Make your cheque payable to Mr Bridge and send to: Mr Bridge , Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH ( 01483 489961 www.mrbridge.co.uk/mrbridge-shop Fax 01483 797302 System Requirements: Windows XP, Vista or 7, 8mb RAM, CD-ROM WELL DONE SECOND HAND Good clean copies of QPlus could make useful Christmas presents for grandchildren or even a bridge partner. Support Little Voice, the charity with a school house in Adis Ababa, Ethiopia. Just make your selection. Congratulations, Voyages to Antiquity, on being voted Best Specialist Cruise Line at the 2012 cruise awards. I can tell you from experience that the award is thoroughly deserved. Well done them. FESTIVE CRUISE Aegean Odyssey will be in South East Asia over the Christmas Festive season. There are still some cabins available without single supplement. I just thought you’d like to know. JUST DUPLICATE with Mr Bridge Q Plus 7 donation: £10. Q Plus 8 donation: £16. Q Plus 9 donation: £25. Please send your cheque for the CD of your choice, made payable to L.U.C.I.A. Little Voice with two 2nd class stamps to cover the cost of posting it to you. BERNARD’S PARTY Elstead Hotel, Bournemouth BH1 3QP 9-11 November 2012 hosted by Jo Walch 16-18 November 2012 Please note there are no seminars or set hands at these events. TRY MINERVA Last issue, I wrote about the compact cruise ship, Minerva. On the back cover of this issue, you will find details of a Voyage to Oman. Ann and I look forward to cruising the Red Sea, then along the Yemeni and Oman coasts all the way to Abu Dhabi. Lots of sea days so lots of bridge, lots of sunshine and some off-beat countries to tick off the list. Still some cabins available without a single supplement. BETTER BRIDGE The DVDs from Haslemere 2011 have been reviewed in the recent issue of English Bridge, see page 23. The DVDs from Haslemere 2012 are now ready and cover six entirely different aspects of the game, all clearly explained by Bernard Magee. Bernard Magee will host a festive party at the Chatsworth Hotel over the weekend 28 – 30 December for those of you who have withdrawal symptoms. He will be covering doubles. All sorts of doubles: takeout, negative, penalty and even Lightener doubles. JUST BRIDGE Chatsworth Hotel, Worthing BN11 3DU As you can see from the adjacent advertisement we have a new venue in Dorset. The Elstead Hotel, Bournemouth. I have personally visited the hotel and given it a really thorough inspection. I have asked them to provide competitive rates for full board, so that we can have fairly frequent Just Bridge events once again down in Dorset. Full board at such a lovely venue with 6 sessions for £169. A real bargain. 16-18 November 2012 Page 5 hosted by Crombie McNeil 30 Nov - 2 Dec 2012 hosted by Ned Paul £169 Full-board No Single Supplement Payment in full at the time of booking. Mr Bridge AT THE ROYAL KENZ TUNISIA Two-week half-board duplicate bridge holiday DIARIES 2013 FESTIVE SEASON Only red and navy blue covers left. See facing page. Last call for golf and bridge in early November in Tunisia. Tony Richards leads a small party at The Royal Kenz Hotel. The adjacent advertisement tells you about our Christmas and New Year events. Do give us a call if you would like more information. Playing partners are always guaranteed and there will be an experienced support team at both venues. AND IN FEBRUARY GIFT IDEAS Bernard Magee and his team once again take out a party to the Royal Kenz. If you haven’t been with Bernard before, you will be pleased. If you have, you will already know what to expect and get it. With Christmas coming, suitable gifts are always hard to think of. How about a bone china mug with any one of the three designs. It’s Only A Game, the Mystery Man or the XXXX bidding sequence. They are all great fun. TUNISIA 2013 STAMP DISCOUNT 4-18 November 2012 Golf available Tony and Jan Richards £769* 24 Feb – 10 March 2013 Golf available Bernard Magee and his team £799* *per person half-board sharing a twin-bedded room and is inclusive of bridge fees. Single supplement £6 per night. These prices are based on air travel from Heathrow to Tunis. Flights from other UK airports are available at a supplement. Prices for seven-night stays are available on application. Pay £70 per fortnight per person extra and have a pool-facing room, tea & coffee making facilities, bath robe and a bowl of seasonal fruit. These holidays have been organised for Mr Bridge by Tunisia First Limited, ATOL 5933, working in association with Thomas Cook Tour Operations Limited, ATOL 1179. DETAILS & BOOKINGS ( 01483 489961 Just a quick plug for my most faithful sponsor whose support helps pay for this free magazine. ( 0208 422 4906 clive.goff@londonrugby.com Value supplied in two stamps combined to make up the 50p 2nd class rate, 2nd class to you, 41p. 1st class 60p, only 50p to you. Available in batches of 100. Another suggestion is my new design Mr Bridge tie. Some might think it a bit loud, see illustration on page 3, but it’s ideal to be worn at Christmas parties. As a last resort, playingcards are always useful and a boxed pair of packs will always be welcome. £10. OUT EAST INSURANCE With a 48-page magazine, I always have a two page advertisement promoting Global Travel Insurance. Having only half the pages this time means you should telephone my office if you require their details. ALL CHANGE If you have been using the same tutorial software for some time, why not send in your old CD and a cheque for £39. Choose from the list on the facing page. You know the fun you have had already, now you can have the same all over again. In January and early February, Bernard is in South East Asia hosting two back to back bridge parties, details of which can be found on pages 8 and 15. These can be booked as separate cruises or as a grand cruise. Ring ( 01483 489961. So much to do and so much to look at but there are lots of days at sea, so sightseeing can give way to bridge. Then you can have a rest from bridge and explore what is still a very interesting and mysterious corner of the world. All good wishes Mr Bridge Page 6 Christmas & New Year 2012/13 Duplicate Bridge Denham Grove Near Uxbridge, UB9 5DU 24-27 Dec £455 Just Bridge Jo Walch (with a small separate section for rubber / Chicago hosted by Diana Holland) 27-29 Dec £215 Game Tries Gary Conrad 29 Dec – 1 Jan £445 Finding Slams Gary Conrad The Olde Barn Marston, Lincs NG32 2HT 24-27 Dec £455 Just Bridge Val Passmore 27-29 Dec £215 Doubles Patrick Dunham 29 Dec – 1 Jan £445 Losing Trick Count Patrick Dunham ( 01483 489961 jessica@mrbridge.co.uk www.holidaybridge.com ✄ ✄ Mr Bridge MAIL ORDER TUTORIAL DVDs PLAY SOFTWARE QPlus 10 QPlus 10 - Trade-in Bridge Baron Mac compatible Bridge Baron – Trade-in £86.00........ £35.00........ £63.00........ £36.00........ TUTORIAL SOFTWARE Begin Bridge Acol Version £66.00........ Acol Bidding £66.00........ Advanced Acol Bidding £96.00........ Declarer Play £76.00........ Advanced Declarer Play £81.00........ Defence £76.00........ Five-Card Majors with Strong No-Trump £89.00........ Better Bridge with Bernard Magee Haslemere 2011 £69.00........ Better Bridge with Bernard Magee In course Haslemere 2012 of preparation SOFTWARE BUNDLE OFFER Any two software pieces £120.00........ BOOKS Duplicate Bridge Rules Simplified Better Hand Evaluation Bernard Magee’s Bridge Quiz Book Bernard Magee’s Quiz and Puzzle Book Tips for Better Bridge £5.95........ £14.00........ £14.00........ £14.00........ £14.00........ Haslemere 2011 1 Ruffing for Extra Tricks £25.00........ 2 Competitive Auctions £25.00........ 3 Making the Most of High Cards £25.00........ 4 Identifying & Bidding Slams £25.00........ 5 Play & Defence of 1NT Contracts £25.00........ 6 Doubling & Defence to Doubled Contracts £25.00........ All 6 DVDs as a boxed set £100.00........ Haslemere 2012 7Leads £25.00........ 8 Losing Trick Count £25.00........ 9 Making a Plan as Declarer £25.00........ 10 Responding to 1NT £25.00........ 11 Signals & Discards £25.00........ 12Endplays £25.00........ All 6 DVDs as a boxed set £100.00........ MR BRIDGE TIE Name (Mr, Mrs, Miss) ............................................... Address ................................ ............................................... ............................................... Postcode .............................. Telephone ............................. E-mail .................................... Please send BRIDGE to the following enthusiasts: Name (Mr, Mrs, Miss) £15.00........ ............................................... 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Please complete all or part of this form and return to: Mr Bridge, Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey, GU21 2TH. Expiry: ............. CVV ........ Issue No. ........... (CVV is the last 3 numbers on the signature strip) ( 01483 489961 www.mrbridge.co.uk/mrbridge-shop Page 7 ✄ ✄ Make your cheque payable to Mr Bridge and send to: Mr Bridge, Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH CRUISE FROM BALI TO BOROBUDUR & BEYOND HOSTED BY Verdant rice paddies, ancient temples and the vibrant cities of Asia all feature on this splendid voyage! BERNARD MAGEE The origins, construction and demise of the magnificent temple of Borobudur in Java are shrouded in mystery. There is no written record of who built Borobudur or why it was built. It was likely founded as a religious site in the 8th century and the construction is thought to have taken a period of 75 years and completed in about 825AD. It was abandoned and hidden for centuries under layers of volcanic ash and thick jungle growth. Nobody knows for sure why it was abandoned but it was never forgotten entirely with folklore ensuring that stories of the great monument lived on. What is certain is that your visit to this spectacular site will be a highlight of your trip. Your journey also takes you to the fascinating cities of Singapore and Ho Chi Minh City and Thailand’s vibrant capital, Bangkok. It begins, however, on Bali, the famed “Island of the Gods”, with its varied landscape of hills and mountains, sandy beaches and lush rice terraces all providing a picturesque backdrop to its colourful, deeply spiritual and unique culture. FARES INCLUDE: SIGHTSEEING EXCURSIONS AT ALL PORTS EXPERT LECTURE PROGRAMME WINE WITH DINNER & GRATUITIES ON BOARD EXCLUSIVE MR BRIDGE COCKTAIL PARTY Bangkok Thailand Sihanoukville Ho Chi Minh City Cambodia Vietnam Gulf of Thailand Singapore Java Sea Semerang INDONESIA Bali JANUARY 23, 2013 – 15 days from £2,750 DATE JAN 23 JAN 24 JAN 25 PORT Depart UK Arrive BALI Indonesia BALI Indonesia Embark Aegean Odyssey JAN 26 At Sea JAN 27 SEMERANG (BOROBUDUR) Indonesia JAN 28/29 At Sea JAN 30 SINGAPORE JAN 31 At Sea FEB 1/2 HO CHI MINH CITY Vietnam FEB 3 At Sea FEB 4 SIHANOUKVILLE Cambodia FEB 5 FEB 6 SCHEDULED AIR & TRANSFERS PLUS MR BRIDGE SPECIAL FARES CALL ON 01483 489 961 EXTEND YOUR HOLIDAY ADD EXTRA NIGHTS IN BALI Begin with an optional extra 2-night Bali package AND/OR BANGKOK & ANGKOR WAT A grand conclusion to your journey. 5-days in exotic Bangkok including an overnight excursion to the temple of Angkor Wat! Please ask for details 10093 ARRIVE DEPART overnight hotel 6.00pm 6.00am 9.00pm 6.00am 7.00pm 6.00pm 6.00pm 7.00am 8.00pm At Sea BANGKOK Thailand 8.00am Disembark Aegean Odyssey and transfer to airport for flight home MR BRIDGE FARES* Standard Inside £2,750pp Superior Outside from £3,550pp Superior Inside from £2,995pp Deluxe Outside from £4,075pp Standard Outside £3,425pp Deluxe Balcony from £4,795pp * Prices shown are per person, double occupancy and include MR BRIDGE SPECIAL SAVINGS. This offer is subject to availability, is capacity controlled and may be withdrawn at any time. BRIDGE PLAYERS: The bridge programme is completely optional and Mr Bridge passengers can participate as much, or as little as they wish. There is a supplement of £100 for those wishing to participate in the duplicate bridge programme. Singles are made especially welcome and a playing partner will always be found. V OYAGES TO A NTIQUITY www.voyagestoantiquity.com ABTA No.Y2206 Bernard Magee Says Run For Home T his maxim is more for teams of four, rubber or chicago than matchpoints. If you can see a safe play for your contract, take it. Do not take risks for overtricks: run for home. Contract: 4♠. Lead: ♣6. ♠ 10 8 7 5 ♥ K 3 ♦ K Q 3 ♣ A 7 5 3 ♠ A K Q J 6 3 ♥ 7 2 ♦ A 6 2 ♣ Q 4 N WE S Playing pairs, you would let the club run to your queen and expect to make eleven tricks. However, playing teams or rubber, you should ‘run for home’ in case something bad happens: you can count ten top tricks so take them. ♠ 10 8 7 5 ♥ K 3 ♦ K Q 3 ♣ A 7 5 3 ♠ 4 2 N ♥ Q 10 8 6 5 4 WE ♦ J 7 5 4 S ♣6 ♠ A K Q J 6 3 ♥ 7 2 ♦ A 6 2 ♣ Q 4 ♠9 ♥ A J 9 ♦ 10 9 8 ♣ K J 10 9 8 2 If you duck the first club, East wins and returns a club for West to ruff; a heart shift then beats you. Of course, if you grab the ace of clubs, you can draw trumps and ensure ten tricks. Contract: 3NT. Lead: ♣6. ♠ 7 6 5 ♥ A 10 9 8 ♦ A Q J ♣ A K 3 N WE S ♠ A K 4 ♥ 5 4 ♦ 10 8 7 6 4 ♣ Q 4 2 You win the club with the queen and play a diamond to the jack, which wins (all follow). What do you do next? Playing pairs, it would be tempting to finesse again in diamonds, so you cross back to hand with a spade and play a diamond to the queen. Unfortunately, East takes his king and returns a spade. ♠ 7 6 5 ♥ A 10 9 8 ♦ A Q J ♣ A K 3 ♠ 9 3 2 ♥ K J 7 3 N WE ♦ 5 2 S ♣ J 9 8 6 ♠ A K 4 ♥ 5 4 ♦ 10 8 7 6 4 ♣ Q 4 2 ♠ Q J 10 8 ♥ Q 6 2 ♦ K 9 3 ♣ 10 7 5 With the diamonds blocked and your last entry gone, you would go down. Playing teams or rubber, you would not fall for East’s duck. You would see that by knocking out the diamond king you could make ten tricks. You would thus play dummy’s ace of diamonds and continue with the jack. You would make four diamond tricks instead of two and Page 9 so finish with an overtrick. Running for home is an important tactic, but that does not mean you should overlook safe overtricks: Contract: 3NT. Lead: ♠Q. ♠ 7 6 5 ♥ 7 5 4 ♦ A K 7 6 4 ♣ 4 2 ♠ Q J 10 2 N ♠ 9 8 4 ♥ 10 8 3WE ♥ 9 6 2 ♦ Q 10 3 S ♦ J 5 2 ♣ J 9 8 ♣ K Q 10 6 ♠ A K 3 ♥ A K Q J ♦ 9 8 ♣ A 7 5 3 With nine top tricks, you could run for home, but it can do no harm at all to duck a diamond in both hands. If the suit breaks 3-3, you will find yourself making two overtricks. You win the spade and play a small diamond from both hands – this retains the connection with dummy’s hand. You win the spade return and, when you cash your A-K of diamonds, you find that diamonds do break 3-3. You rack up 11 tricks without risking your contract. Had you found the suit breaking 4-2 you would have settled for nine tricks. Playing teams of four, overtricks are not very important but, if you make two in complete safety, you might gain 1 or 2 IMPs – and small swings can add up over a long match. Conclusion Taking risks in a safe contract is a pairs tactic. In all other forms of the game, you look to run for home – taking your tricks and ensuring your contract. However, there is no harm pursuing an overtrick if it is entirely safe to do so. ■ Julian Pottage Says Opening 2♣ Often Means Five Quick Tricks and a Powerful Game Going Hand I n Acol, the strongest normal opening bid is 2♣. If the hand is balanced, this shows at least 23 high card points. If not, you need five quick tricks and a powerful game-going hand. What are quick tricks and why do you need them? Quick tricks are winners you expect to make whether you are declarer, dummy or a defender. A hand with many quick tricks will be useful no matter what the trump suit. In each suit you count one for an ace or king-queen, two for an ace-king, a half for a king and one and a half for an ace-queen. Hand A Hand B ♠ A 3 ♠ A K J 9 4 ♥ K 8 5 ♥ A K Q 9 2 ♦ A Q 8 5 ♦ A 8 ♣ A K 7 2 ♣3 Hands A and B both have five quick tricks. A has one in spades, two in clubs, a half in hearts and one and a half in diamonds. Hand B has two each in the majors and one in diamonds. Of course, hand A is not a 2♣ opener. It is a balanced hand, so the test is whether you have 23 HCP, which you do not. With 20 HCP, you open 2NT. Hand B you do open 2♣. You have a powerful game-going hand as well as five quick tricks. You expect to make game in whichever major partner prefers, more or less whatever you find opposite. Moreover, you need very little from partner to make a slam. You would fancy your chances of making 6♠ facing the right Yarborough (a hand with no points at all). All you really need in that case is five-card spade support. If you open anything other than 2♣ on hand B, partner will never work out you have a hand this good. You will end up having to guess where to play and may guess wrong. Hand C Hand D ♠Void ♠ K Q J 10 2 ♥ A K J 9 2 ♥ K Q J 10 3 ♦ A 9 4 ♦ K Q J ♣ A K Q 4 2 ♣Void Hand C (from a tournament in Beijing) has five quick tricks and meets the other requirements for a 2♣ opening. Facing a hand with three low hearts and a bust, you expect to make 4♥. As with hand B, you need very little opposite to make a slam good. A singleton diamond and a fit for one of your long suits is one way you could make a slam facing Yarborough. Even if you open a strong 2♥, partner will not work out that you need so little to make a game or a slam. With Hand D, you expect to make game in one of the majors, losing three aces. On a bad day, partner has little and the opponents will keep forcing you in clubs, meaning you run out of trumps. That would be unlucky. Even so, you should not open 2♣ on Hand D. You are well short of having five quick tricks. Indeed, you have only three, one for each of your three kingqueen combinations. 2♠ (strong) is fine. What is the danger in opening 2♣ on a hand like this? Partner might have a couple of aces (one of them in clubs) and assume that you must have a slam on. Another danger is that the auction will become competitive and partner will find you have nowhere near the expected defensive strength against an opposing (club) contract. How does the rule apply if you play Benjamin? In this case 2♦ is the strongest bid, with 2♣ covering the slightly weaker eight playing trick hands. A Benjamin 2♦ has the same requirements as an Acol 2♣: if unbalanced, it shows five quick tricks and a powerful game going hand. Page 10 What would you open on hands A, B, C and D playing Benjamin? If you play a 2NT opening as 19-20 (as in the original version of Benjamin), you open 2NT on hand A. Because the hand has 20 HCP, it is in both the 20-22 Acol range and the 19-20 range. With hand B, you open 2♦. Most hands on which you would open 2♣ in Acol you open 2♦ in Benjamin. With a hand this good, you want to use the system strong opening to create a forcing situation. Hand C is slightly more problematic. In Acol, the sequence 2♣-2♦, leaves you room to rebid 2♥. In Benjamin, if you open 2♦ and partner makes the likely 2♥ response (negative, or for some a waiting bid), you will have to go to 3♥ to show your heart suit. Another factor is that partner is likely to be declarer in a heart contract, putting your strong hand on the table. Playing Benjamin, I would not object to either 2♣ or 2♦ on Hand C. However, it is a matter to discuss with your partner. If you are going to open 2♣ on hands like this, you do not want partner to pass after 2♣-2♦-2♥. On hand D, if you were short of the requirements for an Acol 2♣, you are equally short of having enough for a Benjamin 2♦. I would open 2♣. You intend to rebid 2♠ over the expected 2♦ response and show your hearts later. If you open 1♠, the bidding may end there when you are cold for 4♥. Summary To open an Acol 2♣ (or a Benjamin 2♦) when your hand is unbalanced you need at least five quick tricks and sufficient playing strength to make game opposite nothing or next to nothing. In other words, you need five quick tricks and a powerful game-going hand or 23+ HCP if balanced. ■ David Gold Says Limit Your Hand O ne of the most important things to do in a constructive auction is to limit your hand. What does this mean exactly? Usually limiting your hand means telling partner how many points you have; occasionally it means telling partner what level you have aspirations to (i.e. whether you are interested in a part-score only, or game or perhaps even slam). Limit bids are usually raises of partner’s suit or no-trump bids. Limit bids thus help partner to judge not just how high to go but what denomination in which to play. Change of suit bids and forcing bids are the opposite – they are usually unlimited bids. Let us start with a common situation: ♠ Q J 3 ♥ K 9 6 5 ♦ K 2 ♣ A 10 6 5 You hold the hand above and open 1NT (12-14). Partner responds 3♠ showing slam interest with at least six spades. What would you bid? Right, you should bid 4♣ as a cue bid. You have only 13 points but you have limited the strength of your hand by opening 1NT so partner will expect at most 14. You have also limited the shape of your hand, which is why partner knows that 4♣ shows the ace of clubs and agrees spades; with a long string of clubs, you would have opened something else. You have nothing to be ashamed of – you have three trumps, a possible ruffing value with your doubleton diamond and a couple of useful control cards. See how opening 1NT made the subsequent bidding easier; you do not have to feel worried that partner will expect more. For the record partner held… ♠ A K 9 6 5 2 ♥ A 2 ♦ A Q 3 ♣ 9 2 …and gratefully used Blackwood to reach the cold slam. Another common situation: You pick up… ♠ K 10 7 6 ♥ 6 5 ♦ K J 7 5 ♣ 7 6 3 … Partner opens 1♠ and you raise to 2♠. Next partner makes a game try of 3♦ – what now? Well your 2♠ limited your hand. It showed 6-9 points with spade support. In that context, you are above minimum with help in diamonds so you have an easy 4♠ bid. Partner will not be disappointed with your dummy; he knows you hold at most 9 points. Partner’s hand: ♠ A Q 9 3 2 ♥ K Q 4 ♦ A 10 6 2 ♣9 4♠ should make in comfort. Whenever partner makes a limit bid – a no-trump bid, a raise or preference to your suit or perhaps a non-forcing repeat of his suit – stop to work out the combined values. You are probably doing this without realising it already. For instance, if partner opens a 12-14 1NT, you know that with 14 points you can go for game but not a slam. Page 11 Now you may be ready for a more subtle situation, one that came up in a match. ♠ A Q J 6 4 ♥ K 10 5 ♦ 5 3 ♣ A Q 6 You hold the above hand as South playing imps (teams). Partner opens 1♦ and the auction continues: North South 1♦2♠ 3♦? Your 2♠ was a natural jump shift, forcing to game. Partner’s 3♦ rebid suggests a six-card or possibly strong five-card suit. Since 3♦ is forcing it does not show a minimum opening, though often partner will have one. Neither player has thus made a limit bid so far. Here I think the correct bid is clear. Bid 3NT. This limits your hand to some extent. You have shown some interest above 3NT already (by making the strength-showing jump shift). The time has come to suggest that you have ‘limited’ interest past game (because 3NT is not forcing) not to mention that you have the other suits adequately stopped. This sequence should show 16-18 points and stoppers in the unbid suits. If partner chooses to look for slam, he will now not be disappointed with your hand. Summary See how easy the bidding was on these three deals. My advice? Limit your hand! ■ Bernard Magee’s Tips for Better Bridge 2012-2013 with B 65 invaluable tips in 160 pages Bidding Tips 1 Always consider bidding spades if you can 2 Bid more aggressively when non-vulnerable 3 Always double when the opponents steal your deal 4 A takeout double shows shortage in the suit doubled 5 ‘Borrow’ a king to keep the auction open 6 After a penalty double, don’t let the opponents escape 7 Halve the value of a singleton honour when opening 8 Only add length-points for a suit that might be useful 9 Isolated honours are bad except in partner’s suit 10 Use the jump shift sparingly 11 Consider passing and letting partner decide 12 You need two top honours for a second-seat pre-empt 13 Put the brakes on if you have a misfit 14 Strong and long minors work well in no-trumps 15 One stop in the opponents’ suit can be enough for no-trumps 16 Keep your two-level responses up to strength 17 Use your normal methods in response to a 1NT overcall 18 Don’t overcall just because you have opening points 19 Overcalls can be quite weak, so be prudent when responding 20 Weak overcalls must be based on strong suits 21 6NT requires 33 points not 4 aces and 4 kings 22 Raise immediately, if weak with four-card support 23 In a competitive auction, show support immediately 24 Bid to the level of your fit quickly with weak hands 25 With strength and support, use the opponents’ bid suit Declarer-play Tips 26 When your contract depends on a finesse, think ‘endplay’ 27 Consider what a defender might be thinking about 28 Always take your time at trick one 29 Establish extra tricks before cashing your winners 30 Use your opponents’ bidding to your advantage 31 Avoid the ‘baddie’ gaining the lead 32 Use the Rule of Seven when holding up in no-trumps 33 A low lead usually promises length and an honour 34 When declaring 1NT, try to be patient 35 Duck an early round when you are short of entries 36 Lead up to your two-honour holding 37 Do not always assume a suit will break well 38 Drop a high card to put off the defence 39 Play your highest card to tempt a defender to cover 40 Draw trumps first unless you have a good reason not to 41 Do not waste your trumps 42 Consider leaving a lone defensive trump winner out Defence Tips 43 Keep four-card suits intact whenever possible 44 Give count on declarer’s leads 45 Keep the right cards rather than signal 46 Take your time when dummy is put down 47 High cards are for killing other high cards 48 Do not waste intermediate cards 49 Pick two key suits to concentrate on during the play 50 If in doubt, cover an honour with an honour 51 If a lead is from two honours, it is best not to cover 52 Keep your honour to kill dummy’s honour 53 Try to show partner your solid honour sequences 54 Lead the normal card when leading partner’s suit 55 Never underlead an ace at trick one in a suit contract 56 Be wary of leading from four cards to only one honour 57 Lead a higher card from a suit without an honour 58 Lead through ‘beatable’ strength and up to weakness 59 Cash your winners before trying for a trump promotion 60 Be patient when defending 1NT 61 Trump leads can be safe throughout the play General Tips 62 Do not put important cards at either end of your hand 63 Avoid being declarer when you are dummy 64 Before you lead, ask for a review of the auction 65 Enjoy the Game! NOVEMBER 2012 FEBRUARY 2013 2-4 £245 4-18 Bangkok and the Jewels of Southeast Asia, mv Aegean Odyssey. Blunsdon House Hotel Squeezes 9-11 Inn on the Prom £245 Declarer Play 17-27 The Wonders of India to the Beauty of the Maldives, mv Aegean Odyssey. 24-10/3 Royal Kenz £799 Hotel, Tunisia Half-board Duplicate Bridge Holiday MARCH 2013 22-24 Queensferry Hotel £245 Leads and Defence APRIL 2013 5-7 Blunsdon House Hotel £245 Losing Trick Count Inn on the Prom St Annes-on-Sea FY8 1LU 25–8/12Burma and the Malay Peninsula, mv Aegean Odyssey. 12-14 Chatsworth Hotel £245 Declarer Play 19-21 Inn on the Prom £245 Thinking Defence DECEMBER 2012 28-30 Chatsworth Hotel £245 Better Defence JANUARY 2013 23-6/2 Bali to Bangkok and Beyond, mv Aegean Odyssey. Chatsworth Hotel Worthing BN11 3DU Ring £14 including postage and packing from Mr Bridge, Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH. ( 01483 489961 Page 12 Bernard Magee’s Bidding Quiz 3 BRIDGE EVENTS You are West in the auctions below, playing ‘Standard Acol’ with a weak no-trump (12-14 points) and four-card majors. (Answers overleaf.) Bernard Magee 25-2/6Celtic Treasures, mv Voyager. JUNE 2013 11-25 Cheltenham Regency Hotel Cheltenham GL51 0ST 25-7/5 God Created the Kornati Islands, mv Aegean Odyssey. MAY 2013 14 Haslemere Hall 11am-12.30pm Thinking Defence 14 Haslemere Hall 3-4.30pm Pre-Emptive Bidding The Land of the Midnight Sun, mv Voyager. 11-13Blunsdon House Hotel £245 Splinters and Cue Bids 1. Dealer West. Game All. ♠ Q J 7 6 ♥K N WE ♦ A 7 6 4 S ♣ Q 9 4 2 JULY 2013 5-7Blunsdon House Hotel £245 Signals and Discards 12-14 Cheltenham Regency £245 Thinking Defence 18-29 O’ the Wild Charge they made (Istanbul to Istanbul), mv Aegean Odyssey. 15 Haslemere Hall 11am-12.30pm Hand Evaluation (without a fit) WestNorth East South ? Blunsdon House Hotel Swindon SN26 7AS 18-20 Chatsworth Hotel £245 Playing & Defending 1NT 25-27Queensferry Hotel £245 Leads and Defence NOVEMBER 2013 8-10 £245 15 Haslemere Hall 3-4.30pm Splinters and Cue Bids The Olde Barn Leads and Defence 15-17Chatsworth Hotel £245 Hand Evaluation Queensferry Hotel 16 Haslemere Hall North Queensferry KY11 1HP 11am-12.30pm Play/defence at SEPTEMBER 2013 duplicate pairs 16 Haslemere Hall 3-4.30pm Avoidance Play OCTOBER 2013 12-26Mediterranean Medley, mv Voyager. 22-24Blunsdon House Hotel £245 Better Defence DECEMBER 2013 3-19 g ( 01483 489961 Page 13 Tales of India and Arabia, mv Voyager. 2. Dealer West. Game All. ♠4 ♥ A J 5 N ♦ Q 9 8 3 2 WE S ♣ 7 6 5 2 WestNorth East South 1♠2♣ ? 3. Dealer North. N/S Vul. ♠ 7 6 ♥4 N ♦ 8 3 2 WE ♣ K Q J 7 5 4 3 S WestNorth East South 3♣ Pass3NTPass ? 4. Dealer West. N/S Vul. ♠ A 7 ♥ K Q J 5 4 N ♦ Q J 8 WE S ♣ K Q 7 WestNorth East South 1♥Pass4♥Pass ? Answers to Bernard Magee’s Bidding Quiz on page 21 1. Dealer West. Game All. ♠ Q J 7 6 ♠ K 4 2 N ♥ K ♥ 7 6 2 WE ♦ A 7 6 4 S ♦ Q J 3 2 ♣ Q 9 4 2 ♣ A K 7 West ? North East South Pass. ‘Twelve points, so what should I open?’ Slow down. A singleton honour is always of dubious value, even if it is the ace, because it blocks a suit, but especially if it is a lower honour because it might end up as waste paper. Whenever you are considering opening the bidding, you should count all singleton honours (except the ace) at half their value, so J=1/2. Q=1, K=11/2 and A=4. This hand is worth just 101/2 points and, with no five-card suit and no tens, you do not have enough strength to open the bidding. Notice how useless the king of hearts turns out to be: it will drop beneath the opponents’ ace, leaving your hand worth just 9 points. If you had opened, your side would have bid much too high; with 13 points, partner would be likely to bid game. 2. Dealer West. Game All. ♠4 ♠ A K 9 8 2 N ♥ A J 5 ♥ K Q 10 WE ♦ Q 9 8 3 2 S ♦ 7 6 5 ♣ 7 6 5 2 ♣ A 4 West North ? East South 1♠2♣ Pass. Generally, if your opponents come into the auction, try to ignore them and stick to your usual bidding rules. Had South passed, you would have responded 1NT but, because of his 2♣ intervention, you cannot do that now. What a lot of players would do is bid 2♦ instead. However, this still shows the same strength as a direct 2♦ response; 9+ HCP and 10+ points including length. You are a long way short of the requirements for a 2♦ response and should therefore pass. Remember, your partner still has the chance to bid. On this hand, he would probably re-open with a take-out double and now you could bid 2♦, finishing the auction. Had you responded 2♦, partner, placing you with 10 points, would have bid 3NT – not a good result. your partner knows what you have. With his two outside aces and great support for clubs, he hopes that he can make seven club tricks and those two aces: nine tricks. As you can see, you will make the same nine tricks in no-trumps as you would in clubs – your partner was right. 3. Dealer North. N/S Vul. ♠ 7 6 ♠ A 8 N ♥4 ♥ A 6 3 WE ♦ 8 3 2 S ♦ J 10 9 7 6 ♣ K Q J 7 5 4 3 ♣ A 6 2 Pass. With 18 points and a good fivecard suit, should you go for a slam? In Acol, the direct response of 4♥ is used to show a distributional raise to game, based on shortages and length rather than high-card points. What would partner need for a slam? Three aces, or two aces plus a king and a singleton. With such strength, he would have taken his time and given you the chance to explore for slam. The raise to 4♥ is not a complete sign off – if you have enough aces and kings yourself, you could try for slam, but, missing so many of the higher cards, it is highly unlikely that partner will have enough. The down-side of trying for slam is that you might go off in 5♥, as on this deal. Give yourself the diamond ace instead of the queen and jack and now you need a lot less from partner and it would be realistic to try for slam. But, ■ here, you should certainly pass. West North East South 3♣ Pass3NT Pass ? Pass. This really is as simple as just remembering the rule: Never bid again after making a pre-emptive bid unless you are asked to. A simple rule, but an important one. You have described your hand neatly and your partner is taking advantage of your accurate description to bid the best contract. So pass and trust your partner. From your hand, 3NT might seem hopeless, but your opening bid showed seven clubs and little else; 4. Dealer West. N/S Vul. ♠ A 7 ♠ 3 2 N ♥ K Q J 5 4 ♥ A 9 8 7 6 WE ♦ Q J 8 S ♦ K 10 9 7 6 ♣ K Q 7 ♣4 West North East South 1♥ Pass4♥Pass ? Mr Bridge Premium Quality Cards Standard Faces, with or without bar codes. Unboxed. 6 red / 6 blue £19.95 30 red / 30 blue only £60 Available from The London Bridge Centre. ( 020 7288 1305 www.bridgeshop.com Page 14 ASIAN HIGHLIGHTS BANGKOK & THE JEWELS OF SOUTHEAST ASIA SAVE up to £500 Visit the great cites of Asia and the jungles of Borneo on this exciting 2-week Voyage to Antiquity! PER CABIN** Bangkok is a city of contrasts: from pulsating streets and modern skyscrapers to serene temples and grand hotels that once welcomed the likes of Noel Coward and Somerset Maugham. It is the city that moved the famous American author SJ Perelman to write: “From the beginning I was charmed by Bangkok. I liked its polite, gentle handsome people, its temples, flowers and canals, the relaxed and peaceful rhythm of life there.” Bangkok is the first of Southeast Asia’s great cities you will visit on this remarkable journey. Along the way you will also explore Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam and finish in the city-state of Singapore. 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CALL ON 01483 489 961 EXTEND YOUR HOLIDAY ADD BANGKOK & ANGKOR WAT Cambodia Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam Sihanoukville Gulf of Thailand Kota Kinabalu Bandar Brunei Seri Begawan Singapore Kuching BoRNEO/ malaysia FEBRUARY 4, 2013 – 15 days from £2,650 FEB 4 FEB 5 FEB 6 FEB 7 FEB 8 FEB 9 FEB 10 FEB 11 FEB 12 FEB 13 FEB 14 FEB 15 FEB 16 FEB 17 FEB 18 Depart UK Arrive BANGKOK Thailand BANGKOK Thailand Embark Aegean Odyssey At Sea SIHANOUKVILLE Cambodia At Sea HO CHI MINH CITY Vietnam HO CHI MINH CITY Vietnam At Sea KOTA KINABALU Borneo, Malaysia BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN Brunei, Borneo At Sea KUCHING Borneo, Malaysia At Sea SINGAPORE Disembark Aegean Odyssey and transfer to airport for flight home overnight hotel 10.00pm 6.00am 8.00pm noon overnight 2.00pm 2.00pm 7.00am 8.00pm 7.00am 8.00pm 8.00pm 7.00am HOSTED BY BERNARD MAGEE MR BRIDGE FARES* Standard Inside £2,650pp Superior Outside from £3,475pp Superior Inside from £2,895pp Deluxe Outside from £3,995pp Standard Outside £3,295pp Deluxe Balcony from £4,750pp NO SINGLE SUPPLEMENT † **Savings are based on double occupancy and vary by cabin grade - single travellers receive 50% of the saving. *Prices shown are per person, single or double occupancy, include MR BRIDGE SPECIAL SAVINGS, but not applicable cash discounts. †Limited availability on cabins with no single supplement. This offer is subject to availability, is capacity controlled and may be withdrawn at any time. Combine an extended Bangkok stay with exotic Angkor Wat AND/OR STAY ON IN SINGAPORE BRIDGE PLAYERS: The bridge programme is completely optional and Mr Bridge passengers can participate as much, or as little as they wish. There is a supplement of £100 for those wishing to participate in the duplicate bridge programme. Singles are made especially welcome and a playing partner will always be found. Add a 2-night 5-star hotel stay in Singapore Please ask for details 10093 Thailand Bangkok V OYAGES TO A NTIQUITY www.voyagestoantiquity.com ABTA No.Y2206 Jeremy Dhondy Says An Acol Two Shows Values, Not Just Eight Tricks W hen you have a good hand, you want to get this across. Some play Acol Two bids to do so and others Benjamin (and open 2♣). Whatever your choice, you need rules to decide whether a hand is worth a two-level opening. An Acol two is not just a good suit with little outside. It is a hand of power and quality. As well as eight playing tricks, you need defensive strength, high cards and a good suit. After all, if you pre-empted at the four level and were vulnerable against not, you would expect to have eight playing tricks. A starting point in deciding whether to open at the two level is whether you would be worried about missing a game if partner passed with a bust. This first hand is a classic for a strong two: 20 high card points, eight (and a half) playing tricks and a good suit. Open 2♥ if playing Strong Two bids or 2♣ if playing Benjaminised Acol. ♠ A K ♥ K Q J 10 9 3 ♦ A Q 4 ♣ J 6 What do you do with eight playing tricks but few points? You hold: ♠ A K Q J 10 6 4 3 ♥5 ♦ 3 2 ♣ 6 5 It has the requisite number of playing tricks but is more of a pre-emptive hand than a Strong Two; I strongly prefer 4♠ to 2♠. Opening at the four level should certainly make it hard for the opposition to get together in hearts if they have a fit. If you have a strong hand without a good suit, you may prefer another opening. For example, you hold: ♠ K Q J 7 5 ♥ A K 6 ♦ A 9 ♣ K J 4 You have the points and defence to open at the two level but should prefer to open 2NT with a balanced hand. You often have a six-card suit to open a strong two unless you are two suited, when you might have a hand like this: ♠ A K J 5 3 ♥ A Q J 10 6 ♦ A 7 ♣4 If you opened 1♠ and partner passed, you might well have missed a heart fit – and game might well make in hearts. To make the most of opening a strong two you should play it as forcing for one round. If partner has a bad hand, he might otherwise be tempted to pass; some do play their strong twos as not 100% forcing but I believe this is flawed. Consider holding the following hand: ♠ 4 2 ♥ 9 8 5 4 3 ♦ 8 6 ♣ 6 5 3 2 You might be tempted to pass a 2♠ opening. Facing the two-suited hand above, you would not miss game in spades but you surely would make 4♥. This is why you should keep the bidding Page 16 open with a 2NT negative. If partner simply repeats their suit, the pressure is off and you can pass. One good reason to have defensive strength when you open a strong two is what to do if the opponents come into the auction. Partner opens 2♠, the next hand bids 4♥ and you hold: ♠7 ♥ Q 9 8 3 ♦ K Q 5 4 ♣ 7 6 5 4 I think you would want to double 4♥ and expect it to go several down facing a normal Strong two bid. This does not work so well if partner can hold: ♠ K Q J 10 9 6 3 2 ♥Void ♦ J 8 7 ♣ A 3 Now 4♠ will make unless they find a diamond ruff while 4♥ might make or go only one off. If partner is going to remove your double because he has little defence, he would have been better off pre-empting anyway. Summary For an Acol Two bid you should have: l At least 8 playing tricks l A hand of ‘quality and power’ l A good suit l Some defensive strength if the opponents contest the auction (not a purely pre-emptive hand). l A hand that fears a significant risk of playing at the one level when game is available. ■ CRUISE ACROSS CONTINENTS INDIA, OMAN & THE TREASURES OF EGYPT Combine the mysteries of India and the ancient lands of the Pharaohs in one spectacular voyage! SPECIAL MR BRIDGE FARES Mumbai was made the headquarters of the British East India Company in 1687 but it was the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 that transformed the city – then known as Bombay – into one of the world’s great trading centres. Your journey begins here with an overnight hotel stay and a tour of all the main sights including Mani Bhavan, a museum that was once the residence of Mahatma Gandhi, the Victorian architectural monuments of the British Empire, the Prince of Wales Museum and the Gateway of India. 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FARES INCLUDE: SIGHTSEEING EXCURSIONS AT ALL PORTS EXPERT LECTURE PROGRAMME Luxor Safaga EGYPT Red Sea Muscat Oman Salalah Porbandar INDIA Mumbai Arabian Sea MARCH 20, 2013 – 16 days from £1,695 DATE PORT MAR 20 Depart UK ARRIVE MAR 21 Arrive MUMBAI India MAR 22 MUMBAI India Embark Aegean Odyssey 5.00pm MAR 23 PORBANDAR India 7.00pm MAR 24 At Sea MAR 25-26 MUSCAT Oman MAR 27 At Sea MAR 28 SALALAH Oman DEPART overnight hotel 2.00pm 2.00pm 2.00pm 8.00pm MAR 29 - APR 2 Cruising the Gulf of Arabia & Red Sea overnight hotel APR 3 SAFAGA/LUXOR Egypt Disembark and drive to Luxor APR 4 LUXOR Egypt Transfer to Luxor Airport for flight home WINE WITH DINNER & GRATUITIES ON BOARD ACCOMPANIED BY MR BRIDGE HOST EXCLUSIVE MR BRIDGE COCKTAIL PARTY SCHEDULED AIR & TRANSFERS MR BRIDGE FARES* PLUS MR BRIDGE SPECIAL FARES Standard Inside £1,695pp Superior Outside from £2,150pp Superior Inside from £1,795pp Deluxe Outside from £2,450pp Standard Outside £1,995pp Deluxe Balcony from £2,795pp CALL ON 01483 489 961 SINGLE SUPPLEMENT ONLY £100 EXTEND YOUR HOLIDAY ADD INDIA’S GOLDEN TRIANGLE * Prices shown are per person, double occupancy and include MR BRIDGE SPECIAL SAVINGS. This offer is subject to availability, is capacity controlled and may be withdrawn at any time. Enhance your voyage with the classical sights of Delhi, Agra and Jaipur at the begining of your voyage. Known as India’s “Golden Triangle”, this 4-night land tour is an opportunity not to be missed! Please ask for details. Singles are made especially welcome and a playing partner will always be found. 10093 BRIDGE PLAYERS: The bridge programme is completely optional and Mr Bridge passengers can participate as much, or as little as they wish. There is a supplement of £100 for those wishing to participate in the duplicate bridge programme. V OYAGES TO A NTIQUITY www.voyagestoantiquity.com ABTA No.Y2206 Dave Huggett Says Majors Before Minors P eople bid many more hands to game in a major than in a minor. The reason is not hard to see. Firstly, eleven tricks are harder to make than nine or ten, so often the best game is elsewhere. There is also no room for error. If you make less than eleven tricks, you go down, while if you make more you have missed a slam! Take the following hand for example: ♠ A Q 7 6 4 ♥ J 9 ♦ K 10 5 ♣ Q J 3 Playing a weak no-trump you open 1♠ but reverse the black suit holdings and you should open 1NT and not 1♣. Now suppose you have a balanced 15 count with four hearts and four clubs, say, something like the following: ♠ K 6 5 ♥ A K 9 7 ♦ Q 9 ♣ K 8 7 5 What do you open? Some say to open 1♣ but this is wrong since if partner responds 1♦ you intend rebid 1NT rather than bid your hearts. Surely, it must be better to bid the major if you are only going to bid one of the suits. You also need to respond in a major rather than a minor when partner has opened and you have the choice. ♠ A J 6 5 ♥ 7 6 ♦ K 10 7 5 ♣ 9 7 5 Let us suppose in the first instance that break this rule. partner opens 1♠ and you have the hand You can see that if South bids 1♠ over shown above. With nine losers and 1♦ North would have an easy raise to four-card support, it seems obvious to 2♠ and they would locate an eight-card bid 2♠, and so it is. Now imagine that trump suit as opposed to a six-card fit! partner opened 1♦. By reasoning similar Even when it comes to overcalling you to the above, you might think that a must try getting those four-card majors raise to 2♦ is correct but it just isn’t. If into play. Look at this deal: you make a raise in the minor in this situation, whether it be to the two level or three level you deny holding a four ♠ 7 3 card major. This also means that in the ♥ A K J 8 6 sequence 1♦– 3♦– 3♥/♠ this latter bid ♦ Q J 8 is not necessarily showing a four-card ♣ Q 7 5 suit because responder has denied one; ♠ A 10 8 5 N ♠ K Q 9 2 rather it is usually looking for a no ♥ 9 7 4 2WE ♥3 trump contract and shows values in the ♦ 9 2 S ♦ A K 10 5 3 suit bid. ♣ A J 3 ♣ K 10 4 Sometimes you need to respond in a ♠ J 6 4 four-card major rather than bid a five ♥ Q 10 5 card minor as this example will show: ♦ 7 6 4 ♣ 9 8 6 2 ♠ K 10 7 4 ♥ Q 5 3 ♦ A Q J 9 6 ♣7 N WE S ♠ A 8 3 2 ♥ J 9 2 ♦3 ♣ K Q 9 8 5 When North opens 1♦, South should bid 1♠ and not 2♣ even though there are the values for this latter bid. The reason is that North might have a four-card major but not strength enough to reverse, which means he will have to fall back on rebidding his minor. With a hand minimum for a response at the two-level responder will pass and you will be in a silly contract (2♦). Only if responder intends to bid at least twice should he Page 18 West North East South 1♥DblPass 2♠Pass4♠End By making a take-out double at his first turn, East has brought all the suits into play and not just diamonds. West has enough to jump to 2♠ and now the easy game is reached. In fact, with all the cards behaving so well, declarer might end up making twelve tricks! Now imagine that East had simply bid 2♦ at his first go. With the overall strength of his partner’s hand uncertain and no five-card suit of his own to call, West would almost certainly pass and an easy game would go begging. On the other side of the coin, I recommend that you normally overcall in a major if you have a five-card suit, even if you have the values for a take-out double. The partner to the overcaller can then show support on any three-card holding or longer. Make sure you bid those major suits! ■ Andrew Kambites Says Lead an Unbid Suit G ood defence depends upon an understanding of suit structure, and a vital concept is that of a frozen suit. The spade suit in layout A seems very mundane but it has hidden depths. Layout A ♠ A 10 6 5 N ♠ J 9 3 2 WE S ♠ Q 7 4 ♠ K 8 You might find it helpful to make up the suit from a pack of cards. Suppose declarer has to play the suit himself. He can never make more than two tricks. Try it and see! Now suppose that West decides to lead a fourth-highest two. Dummy plays low and East has to play the queen to prevent declarer’s eight from winning the trick. Declarer wins with the king and later finesses the ten to make three tricks. You can see why we call it a frozen suit – whichever side starts playing it gives away a trick. The characteristic feature of the frozen suit is that the high honours and higher spot cards are scattered between the four hands. If you have a single honour card in a suit, it is quite likely that the suit is frozen. Frozen suits are very common. If you can manage to avoid opening up frozen suits for the benefit of declarer, you will become a good defender. Can you totally avoid it? If the bidding has gone 1NT3NT, you might well decide to lead the two of spades – unlucky. Now suppose that this is the auction: West Pass Pass Auction B North East South 1♣Pass 1♥ 1♠Pass2NT 3NT End What does this auction tell you? It tells you that dummy holds four spades, and that declarer is balanced. If you hold J-9-3-2, isn’t layout A just what you might expect? Frankly, a spade lead now is pretty awful. So what should you lead? Clearly, a lead from a single honour (or even two or three honours) in a suit that your opponents have bid carries great danger. You may find yourself left with only one choice, by default. There is one suit the opponents didn’t bid – diamonds. Our advice is this: When in doubt, lead an unbid suit. Hand C Hand D ♠ J 9 3 2 ♠ 8 7 4 ♥ Q 10 2 ♥ Q 10 2 ♦ 9 4 ♦ A Q ♣ Q 10 6 3 ♣ J 7 5 3 2 You might hold hand C after auction B. This is most unappetising! You don’t really want to lead anything. Therefore, you must tackle it the other way round. Which leads are worse? You quickly rule out the three suits your opponents have bid. This just leaves diamonds, the fourth suit. Lead the nine of diamonds, top of a doubleton. This is as passive as you can be. You need to hope that your small honours and good spot cards in the suits that they have bid will trouble declarer enough to make it hard for him to come to nine tricks. Suppose you have hand D after auction B. This is something of an exception to the rule in that a diamond lead is most unattractive. You have the ace and queen, almost certainly sitting over declarer’s king so don’t give him a cheap trick. This time leading a spade (dummy’s suit) is relatively safe because you lack a spade honour. There is another maxim about leading through Page 19 strength during the play. Leading through strength really means leading from weakness through an opponents’ strength, not leading from a broken suit. Deal E ♠ K 5 2 ♥ K 2 ♦ K Q J 9 6 ♣ 7 6 2 ♠ J 6 3 N ♥ Q 10 8 7 5WE ♦2 S ♣ Q J 4 3 ♠ A 10 9 8 7 ♥ A 9 6 4 ♦ 10 ♣ A 9 8 ♠ Q 4 ♥ J 3 ♦ A 8 7 5 4 3 ♣ K 10 5 West North East South 1♠ Pass 2♦Pass 2♥ Pass 4♠End Players always find it tempting to lead a singleton against a suit contract. When deal E occurred, one West found his two of diamonds too hard to resist. Everything that he could have wanted happened: East had the ace and gave West a ruff, but that was the last trick the defenders took. Declarer could draw the four remaining trumps in two rounds and throw his losers on the diamonds that West had so kindly set up for him. The other West led his queen of clubs, the unbid suit. The defenders made four tricks: two clubs, the ace of diamonds and a trump trick. One final thought to finish with. Our maxim applies mainly to the opening lead! Maxims for defence are very helpful early in the play before you know what is going on. Later on, you need to work out logically what is going on. Counting overrules maxims. ■ Mike Wenble Says Force if You Know Where You are Going F orty or fifty years ago, if partner opened the bidding, it was common to jump on any hand with 16 high-card points or more. ♠ A Q 10 5 3 ♥ 8 4 ♦ K J ♣ A K 9 8 With this, a 2♠ response to a 1♦ opening would have been automatic. These days, what with global warming and everything, we have become more circumspect about using up bidding space in such a cavalier fashion. I doubt that any expert today would prefer a jump to 2♠ over a simple response of 1♠ on this hand. The reason for the change of style is that, when partner opens 1♦, we do not yet know where we will end up playing. Spades, clubs, no-trumps and even diamonds are all possibilities at this stage. By conserving bidding space with a 1♠ response, we give partner the chance to rebid 1NT, 2♣, 2♦, 2♥ or 2♠. Any of these rebids would give us useful information. You should normally use a gameforcing jump shift only when you have a clear idea of where you are heading. A jump shift is appropriate on two main types of hand: 1 You have strong support for partner’s suit (and 16+ points). 2 You have a self-sufficient suit of your own (and again 16+ points). With these types of hand, you want to set up a force and agree the suit (on the next round) so that you can look for a slam. This makes jumping a level of bidding now a worthwhile investment. We can clarify which of these two types we hold on the next round of the auction. With the first type, our rebid will support partner’s suit; with the second type, we repeat our own suit. So, if we hold the hand above and hear partner open 1♠ (rather than 1♦), it is all but certain that we will play in spades – the only question is at what level. With the low doubleton in hearts, this would not be a good hand on which to leap straight into Blackwood. Instead, we should force with 3♣ and show spade support on the next round. Here is an example of the second type: ♠ K Q 3 ♥ K Q J 10 6 5 ♦A ♣ 8 7 2 If partner opens the bidding with 1♦, only a jump to 2♥ does this hand justice. You are highly likely to be playing this hand with hearts as trumps (no-trumps is also possible, but there is time and space to check that). If you responded just 1♥, and partner rebid 2♦, you would have no rebid that describes the hand properly. You would have to manufacture an artificial rebid of 2♠ to keep the auction alive. If partner then raised your spades, all sorts of confusion might ensue. Knowing that responder nearly always has one or other of these types of hands for a force makes opener’s life easy when it comes to choosing a rebid. As opener, you want to keep the bidding low so that partner can show support for your suit or repeat his suit if he has a single-suited hand. If you rebid in no-trumps or reverse, this normally shows extra values, just as it would over a simple response. A jump in your own Page 20 suit is rare, showing a solid suit. Let us give opener a minimum hand: ♠ A 7 ♥ A 3 ♦ K 9 7 5 4 ♣ Q 10 9 6 After a response of 1♥ or 1♠ to your 1♦ opening, you would rebid 2♣. The same principle applies after a jump shift. After a 1♦ – 2♥ start, you should simply rebid 3♣ and await developments. Having forced, partner can rebid 3♦ if he has hearts and diamonds or bid 3♥ with just hearts. If we put this hand with the second responding hand, the auction might go like this: Opener Responder 1♦2♥ 3♣3♥ 3♠14♦2 4♥3End When responder shows that he has forced with a long, strong heart suit, opener realises that A-x is very good support. 3♠ is a cue bid, economically showing first-round control of spades and agreeing hearts as trumps. Note that 3♠ cannot be a suit. As opener had the chance to bid 2♠ over 2♥ he cannot want to play in spades. Nor can 3♠ be fourth-suit forcing trying for 3NT. With no spade stopper, opener would just raise to 4♥. 2 4♦ shows first-round control of diamonds, and by inference denies a club control. It cannot mean diamond support. Responder would have bid 3♦ last time with diamond support. 3 This time opener is unable to help, having no control in clubs, and so he signs off in game. 4♥ is an easy make and is far better than 5♥, which might fail on a club lead. ■ 1 Julian Pottage Says A New Suit at the Three Level is Forcing I n most constructive sequences, a new suit at the three level is forcing, often forcing to game. How does having the bid as forcing help? You do not have to guess the final contract too early in the auction! Instead, you can explore for it. If your side belongs in a game or a slam, it can be vital that you reach the right one. The fact that some part score contracts become impossible to stop in is a fair price to pay. Here are some auctions that involve introducing a new suit at the three level. In each sequence, West’s latest bid is forcing – East must bid again. 1 West North East South 1♠Pass2♦Pass 3♣ In auction 1, 3♣ is a high reverse, showing at least five-four in the black suits and normally at least 15 HCP. These values plus those that responder has shown put you in the game zone. Hands A and B would fit the bill: Hand C Hand D ♠ 9 3 ♠2 ♥ 9 8 ♥A ♦ K Q 10 8 5 ♦ A Q 8 6 4 2 ♣ A K J 2 ♣ A J 8 7 3 You can see the wisdom of having 3♣ as forcing from these hands, both of which would fit auction 2. On Hand C you do not want to bid 4♠ with only two spades or 3NT with no heart stopper. 3♣ allows you to find out more about opener’s hand. On D, a slam is still possible if partner has club support or secondary diamond support. Keeping the bidding low with a forcing 3♣ leaves you room to find out. The corollary is that you cannot bid 3♣ here on game-invitational or weaker hands. You would have to bid 2NT, raise 2♠ to 3♠ or pass 2♠, whichever seemed the most suitable action. 3 West North East South 1♥ Pass2♥Pass 3♣ Hand A Hand B ♠ A Q 9 6 3 ♠ K Q 9 6 3 2 ♥ 8 5 ♥ A Q 2 ♦ K 5 ♦Void ♣ A K 7 4 ♣ A J 8 3 In auction 3, 3♣ is clearly forcing since you are not going to want to play in clubs having bid and raised hearts. With weaker hands than these, make the ace of clubs the two for instance, opener rebids 2♠, non-forcing. Hand E Hand F ♠ 9 3 ♠Void ♥ A J 9 4 2 ♥ A Q 9 5 3 ♦ A K ♦ A J 9 ♣ K 8 6 2 ♣ K Q J 8 3 2 West North East South 1♠Pass 2♦Pass2♠Pass 3♣ In auction 2, 3♣ is not a reverse but it is still a new suit at the three level and therefore forcing. Responder (West) needs opening values for the bid. Hands E and F would fit here. Hand E is the more typical – opener is trying for game and would like some help in clubs. With Hand F, West sniffs a chance of a slam if East has the right cards. With a weaker hand than E, West would simply pass 2♥. Page 21 4 West North 3♦ East South 1♠2♥ Although 3♦ is West’s first bid, it is a change of suit response and so forcing. West should have roughly opening values or better. Hand G Hand H ♠ 7 2 ♠ 7 2 ♥ 10 6 ♥ 9 3 ♦ A K J 6 2 ♦ A K 8 6 2 ♣ K Q 10 4 ♣ K 10 4 2 Hand G is fine for 3♦ in auction 4. With the weaker hand H, you double (for takeout) rather than bidding 3♦, a new suit at the three level remember. 5 West 3♦ North East South 1♠Pass 2♠ Do you spot the difference with this sequence? East has only passed. West is competing, albeit at a high level, rather than engaging in a constructive sequence. 3♦ suggests a fair hand and rather a good suit, yes, but there is no reason why this sequence should be forcing. With a very good hand, West could double 2♠ (take-out) or maybe make some sort of two-suited bid. Summary Once one member of the partnership has bid, the bid of a new (previously unbid) suit at the three level by the other is normally forcing, at least for one round and generally to game. If your values do not justify creating a forcing situation, you must find some other bid (at the two level), bid a suit that one of you has bid before or pass. ■ BERNARD MAGEE Filmed Live at Haslemere Festival 2011 2012 1Ruffing for Extra Tricks 7Leads This seminar deals with declarer’s use of ruffing to generate extra tricks and then looks at how the defenders might counteract this. Bernard takes you through all the basic leads and the importance of your choice of lead. If you start to think not just about your hand, but about your partner’s too, then you will get much better results. 2Competitive Tricks This seminar focuses on competitive auctions from the perspective of the overcalling side to start with and then from the perspective of the opening side in the second part. 3Making the Most of High Cards This seminar helps declarer to use his high cards more carefully and then looks at how defenders should care for their precious high cards. 4Identifying & Bidding Slams The first half of this seminar is about identifying when a slam might be on – one of the hardest topics to teach. The second half covers some of the techniques used to bid slams. 5Play & Defence of 1NT Contracts This seminar looks at the most common and yet most feared of contracts: 1NT. The first half looks at declaring the contract and the second part puts us in the defenders’ seats. 8Losing Trick Count A method of hand evaluation for when you find a fit. Bernard deals with the basics of the losing trick count then looks at advanced methods to hone your bidding. 9 Making a Plan as Declarer Bernard explains how to make a plan then expands on how to make the most of your long suits. The first half deals with no-trumps, the second with suit contracts. 10Responding to 1NT This seminar deals with Transfers and Stayman in detail. The 1NT opening comes up frequently, so having a good, accurate system of responses is paramount. 11 Signals & Discards This seminar deals with Count, Attitude and Suit-preference signals: aiming to get you working as a partnership in defence. 12Endplays 6Doubling & Defence against Doubled Contracts The first half of this seminar explores penalty doubles and the second half discusses the defence against doubled contracts. Bernard takes you through the basics of the technique before showing some magical hands where you take extra tricks from defenders. In the second half, Bernard looks at how to avoid being endplayed as a defender. DVDs DVDs Each £25. Boxed Set of 6 £100 Each £25. Boxed Set of 6 £100 Make your cheque payable to Mr Bridge and send to: Mr Bridge, Ryden Grange, Knaphill, Surrey GU21 2TH ( 01483 489961 www.mrbridge.co.uk/mrbridge-shop Fax 01483 797302 ‘Better Bridge with Bernard’ DVDs reviewed by June Booty T First published in the October 2011 issue of English Bridge and reprinted by kind permission of the EBU. his is a collection of six DVDs, each one of a series of lectures which were given by Bernard Magee as part of the 2011 Haslemere Festival, totalling eight and a half hours in all. There are three playing topics: Ruffing for Extra Tricks, Making the Most of High Cards, and Play and Defence of 1NT Contracts; and three mainly bidding topics: Competitive Auctions, Finding and Bidding Slams, and Doubling and Defence against Doubled Contracts. Because the lectures were filmed live there is audience participation. Often Magee asks the audience what they think something means and it is difficult to hear what they are saying, but he summarises their answers so it is easy to follow. Often a member of the audience will ask a question and the camera zooms in on them. This interaction adds to the interest of the DVDs. Magee treats all of the audience comments with respect, even when he doesn’t agree with them, and gives comprehensive answers. Throughout all of the lectures Bernard Magee is very knowledgeable and enthu siastic about his subject. His points are made in a clear and structured way with plenty of examples to illustrate his argument. Initially his arm movements are a little distracting, as well as his repeated question to his audience: ‘Can you see what I mean?’, but the listener soon learns to ignore these, and the animated enthusiasm of body and voice helps to enhance the enjoyment. Magee stands to one side of a large projection screen upon which he shows slides to illustrate his points. These are very clear and help the viewer to follow the points in the lecture. It is very easy to follow a deal that is being played in this way. The Competitive Auctions DVD deals with many aspects of competitive auctions such as Unassuming Cuebids, Negative Doubles, and when to compete and when to double. One example deal used is: Love All. Dealer West. ♠ J 9 5 3 2 ♥ 7 4 2 ♦ A K ♣ K Q 4 ♠ A 6 ♠ K 8 4 ♥ A K Q 9 N ♥ J 10 8 5 WE ♦ J 9 4 S ♦ Q 10 5 3 ♣ J 9 5 3 ♣ 7 2 ♠ Q 10 7 ♥ 6 3 ♦ 8 7 6 2 ♣ A 10 8 6 West North East South 1♥1♠2♥2♠1 All Pass Pass2Pass 3♥3 1 This is an example of raising to the level of the fit, i.e. North has five or more spades for his overcall and South has three spades. This makes a total of eight spades so South bids to make eight tricks. 2 West cannot guarantee that East has four hearts as partner will often raise with three-card support in these situations, and the partnership cannot have enough points for game, so he will pass and leave the decision to partner. 3East knows his side has at least eight hearts, and that the opposition have at least eight spades, so is not prepared to let the opponents play at the two level. 2♥ will make +110 for East-West, which is the best positive score they can make, but if North-South bid 2♠ it will make for minus 110 for East-West. Once North-South have found this good score, East-West can sacrifice in 3♥ which is then only minus 50 for them (minus 100 if the opponents double); this is a better result for EastWest, especially at pairs. This rather difficult topic is explained very clearly step-by-step. Finding and Bidding Slams covers many useful conventions. It starts by explaining when to look for a slam and then explains Quantitative Bidding, Page 23 Key-card Blackwood, Cue-bidding and Splinter Bids. Doubling and Defence Against Doubled Contracts starts by explaining what a penalty double means and when a double is penalty and when it is for take-out. It goes on to explain when not to double. The subjects covered are suitable for all standards of players with at least six months of playing experience, although the Ruffing for Extra Tricks DVD starts very simply and addresses popular basic playing errors. It addresses concepts such as ruffing in the short hand rather than the long hand and setting up a long suit, and goes on to demonstrate strategies that defenders can employ to stop this. Most of the other DVDs would require a little more experience to get the most out of them and would be suitable for players of all levels up to average club standard. Each DVD is in two parts and at the beginning of each one Magee describes what is going to be discussed. He goes on to talk about these topics and also about related subjects that fit in with those being covered. It is not obvious in which order they should be viewed as on the back of each individual DVD they are listed in one order while on the back of the pack of six they are listed in a different order. In the Doubling and Defence of 1NT Contracts Magee says, ‘We did cover this in Com petitive Bidding,’ so this would suggest the order on the back of the DVDs is correct, rather than on the box. Bernard Magee’s bidding system and concepts are extremely good, and while I did not agree with absolutely every point he made, everything he says has merit and builds up to an excellent thinking strategy. The DVDs cost £25 each or a boxed set of all six for £100, post free. Each DVD lasts just over an hour (the first few minutes of which have a preamble showing where the lectures took place), and is a high-quality and well presented product.■ Minerva Join Mr & Mrs Bridge on Passage to Oman At Swan Hellenic we will always go further and delve that bit deeper. Our on board Guest Speakers and inclusive excursions ashore take you behind civilisations both ancient and modern, with fascinating results. You will travel in country-house style with around 350 other like-minded passengers. Choose to dine in the restaurant of your choice and in the company of your friends and you will still be assured of exceptional value for money, including a comprehensive programme of shore excursions and all tips on board and ashore. Travel with a truly great British company, established in 1954, and enjoy an experience that will live with you forever. Join Mr & Mrs Bridge to participate in the truly wonderful ‘Swan’ experience. We have enhanced the standard Minerva bridge programme to complement the on board entertainment during the numerous sea days making for a wonderful bridge cruise. On this sailing there will be duplicate sessions every evening with seminars and afternoon bridge on days at sea. There is no bridge supplement as, like most of the excursions, it is included in the price. Additionally, as there is no single supplement, there will be a number of singles travelling and they will always be found a partner for a game. PASSAGE to OMAN Safaga Egypt Khasab Dubai UAE 15 DAYS DEPARTING 21 NOVEMBER TO 5 DECEMBER 2012 Inside £1,705pp (Category N), Outside £2,120pp (Category I) Muscat Salalah Djibouti NO SINGLE SUPPLEMEN T No single supplement – exclusive to Mr Bridge Discover Arab and nomadic culture as you follow ancient trade routes from Egypt down through the Red Sea and around the Arabian peninsula to Oman and Dubai. On an inclusive full day excursion to Luxor including lunch on the banks of the Nile, explore the treasures of Ancient Egypt. Discover traditional merchant houses, archaeological sites, atmospheric souks, ancient frankincense trade routes and ports, palaces and mosques and as a complete contrast, the 21st century city of Dubai. Fares shown are per person and include 14 nights accommodation on board Minerva, meals, shore excursions, gratuities and departure flights from Gatwick with arrival in Heathrow, transfers available on request. Fares shown are Saver Fares – cabin number will not be allocated at time of booking. Full payment required at the time of booking. 100% cancellation charges apply. Not combinable with any other offer or discount and no further loyalty discount. Other categories and fares are available. Prices correct at time of going to print but are subject to change. 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