A Sparkling Switch
by Jan van Cleeff
Mother Earth is divided into two camps during
one day of the year, at least as far as the game of bridge is concerned.
On a beautiful June night you sit down E-W or N-S, anywhere you like. The
latter you may take virtually literally, because the (12th) Worldwide
Bridge Contest is being played everywhere: from Beijing to New York,
from Sydney to Zoetermeer. Everyone plays the same hands at about the same
time, and in the end, this yields two worldstandings, one for N-S and one
for E-W. The Dutch Bridge League had waved its magic wand to transform
one of the sections of the Contest, at the Zoetermeer Bridge home,
into a so-called prominentsdrive (one helluva word), a party for
bigshots of the league and their retinue. The night was saved thanks to
generous support by Arboned, a large commercial company-healthcare-service
(delicious wines and asparagus), a number of top players (who put in a
pro deo appearance), and a handful of politicians who rightly judged
playing a few hands of bridge to be of greater importance than attending
a ministerial press conference on the latest hot potatoe in The Hague.
Zoetermeer was won by Den Hartog-Van der Meij (N-S) and Van Valen-Hoogeveen (E-W). Winning a 24-board contest requires a dose of good fortune, and you also have to apply a bit of pressure. How that's done was demonstrated by Van Valen-Hoogeveen in the following hand.
| N/EW | NORTH | ||
| WEST | EAST | ||
| Hoogeveen | Van Valen | ||
| SOUTH | |||
| West | North | East | South | |
| Hoogeveen | Van Valen | |||
| - | Pass | Pass | 1NT | |
| Pass | Pass | Double | Pass | |
| Pass | Pass | |||