♠ A J 9
♥ K 9 8
♦ 3
♣ Q J 9 8 5 4
You open 1♣ in second seat and LHO overcalls 1♦. Partner passes and RHO bids 1♠. You rebid 2♣ but your side passes from here to the end of the auction.
LHO doubles your 2♣ rebid and RHO cuebids 3♣. LHO tries 3♥ and RHO's 3NT ends the auction. You lead the Q♣ and see this dummy:
♠ Q 5
♥ A 5 3 2
♦ K J T 9 8
♣ A 6
Your hand again, with dummy on your left:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ♠ A J 9
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ♥ K 9 8
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ♦ 3
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ♣ Q J 9 8 5 4
Declarer wins in hand with the K♣, partner contributing the seven. Declarer leads the 4♠ to dummy's queen, partner playing the two. After some thought, the jack of diamonds is led from dummy, and partner plays the two in tempo. Declarer thinks for some time and finally plays the king. The 4♦ is the next play, and declarer rises with the ace after you discard the 4♣, next losing a diamond to partner's queen, declarer playing the three as you pitch a second small club. From partner comes the ten of clubs which declarer wins on the table with the ace.
You are down to ♠AJ ♥K98 ♦-- ♣J9 and declarer has five tricks to your one. Declarer next plays off the winning diamonds to get to seven tricks. Partner follows to one and pitches the four of hearts on the second one. What is your plan for these two tricks and the ace of hearts, declarer's eighth trick, which follows?
...
...
This hand was the finale of the Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championship's secondary event, the Transnational Teams, held this past week in Glasgow, Scotland. The main 28-team event was "won" by the "Chairman's team" with Wales second, Wales winning the gold medals for being the highest-placed national team in a field made up of national teams and several filler teams ineligible to win. The semifinal and quarterfinal losers joined the Transnational Teams event with eight of eleven matches remaining, and despite being only given 33 VP of a possible 60 for the three missed matches, three teams from the main event qualified for the semi-finals: Scottish President's, Canada, and Australia, along with Swiss leaders "Canadonia." Canada and Scottish President's played in the final, which came down to this hand, shown on BBO vugraph here in Vancouver (where several of the Canada and "Canadonia" players are from) Sunday morning. The closed room completed their set as the bidding happened and the score with just this board to play, Canada sitting East-West, was 65-60 to Scotttish President's. The closed room result on this board was 1♠ +1, 110 to East-West. The match result thus depended on the success of the 3NT contract.
The Q♣ was lead and Bryan Maksymetz won in hand with the king, and led a spade to dummy's queen. A short break followed and the vugraph showed the jack of diamonds led to trick three, but when North, Liz McGowan, followed low smoothly, a minute later Maksymetz chose the normal play of winning and trying the finesse the other way. When Sam Punch showed out, the vugraph operator reported that Maksymetz was apologizing to partner Daniel Korbel, who agreed with the play. Hey, we're Canadians, that's what we do.
But it was not quite over. Maksymetz won the K♦ in dummy and led another to North, and the club return put Maksymetz in dummy to cash the rest of the suit for seven tricks. The ace of hearts followed, and, according to the vugraph, all followed low. Big mistake. Do you see it?
Commentator Barnet Shenkin, who did a fine job all day, commented that this was 'mis defence' because the following heart from dummy endplayed South into giving up the ninth trick by leading away from his spades.
But the next vugraph events, nearly simultaneous, were a claim of 8 tricks by East (at least, that was what was entered), and a note from the vugraph operator that "the Scottish President is polishing up his speech." Nothing more was broadcast from either table. You can view the board at the Vugraph Archive, where it is called "2014 TNT Glasgow - F2_2" and the board in question was Board 22 (23 and 24 having been played first at the open table).
What actually happened? Did Sam Punch find the unblock of the king of hearts (risking the match if the positions of the jack and queen of hearts were swapped) and the vugraph operator made an error? (Perhaps Maksymetz's hand with the Q♥ instead of the J♥ is a likely opener, but are you risking the contract on that view?) Or did Maksymetz claim eight tricks from a position where he in fact had nine on an endplay?
I'm guessing there was an unblock here (and if so I say bravo! with great enthusiasm) and a vugraph error and a quick retirement to the party, but some confirmation would be helpful. Anyone know?