If you have ever written something with a deadline, you know the pressures. Writing something with a deadline and with a limit on how long it can be is doubly difficult.
The topic was easy to come up with. It is one of my favorites. I know from experience that the topic is pertinent to every one, a view that I expect you to share with me after reading this.
My original draft came in at about eleven hundred words. Being warned that the length rule was going to be adhered to, I undertook the arduous chore of removing words, one at a time. Truly a painful task as anyone who has written a note, let alone an article, can relate to. Finally, after many fits and starts, the word total came to the required limit of eight hundred.
Since I believed then that this article was an important one, I can offer it to you for inclusion in your exhibit with the same satisfaction that existed when it was written for the Bols contest.
Mike Lawrence
Almost everyone I know will admit to the following mishap. You are declaring, say, 3NT, and due to unfortunate circumstances, the defenders are running their five-card suit so you are going down at least one. Being depressed about the bidding, you discard poorly thus messing up your entries. Suddenly, your eight remaining tricks become only six when the opponents take advantage of your sloppy carding. Three down. It's bad enough you're getting a zero, but even with your head hung half-way to the floor, you catch a glimpse of partner whispering to his kibitzer. Sound familiar?
Bad news is infectious. It brings with it emotions ranging from disappointment to sadness to depression, any one of which can distract and cause muddled thinking.
Most players know that it is important to keep your wits when things go sour. The trick is to recognize when your concentration is failing and to get your thoughts back together.
The tough player does this automatically. The good player struggles, but usually succeeds and the rest of the world does it occasionally, but not routinely.
You say, "I KNOW THAT"? I agree that you probably do know that, but do you really know it on a usable conscious level?
Strong negative emotions. They do obstruct out thoughts. Is there anything worse for our emotions than bad news? Try this.
The bidding goes 1NT - P - 3NT. You lead fourth best from KJ8642 of spades. Dummy has two small spades and 12 high card points.
Have you led into the AQ of spades? No. Partner plays the ace and starts to think. Does he have another spade? Is he thinking of switching? Partner, lead a spade! Please! Partner leads - the spade ten. You are now in charge with six running spades which you proceed to take. Each one a little firmer than the one before, you pound out your remaining spades, the last one being especially satisfying because it is getting you plus two hundred. You're feeling a little ecstasy mixed with a little power as you turn the final spade. Feels good doesn't it?
Now what? Cutting through a euphoric glow, you reconstruct the last four tricks. Let's see now. Partner discarded the - what did he discard? I know his last card was the seven of diamonds. But the one before that, and the one before that.... Come to think of it, what did dummy discard, or for that matter declarer?
Do you think you're going to get it right? What if partner has another ace and you don't get it. Can you stand to see partner talking to that kibitzer again?
Ecstasy plays no favorites. It muddles your bidding judgment, your declarer play, and your defensive awareness with equal facility.
| West | North | East | South |
| 1D | |||
| Pass | 2C | Pass | 2NT |
| Pass | 3H | Pass | 3NT |
| All Pass |
NORTH
95
KQ62
A10
AJ963
SOUTH
QJ8
J95
KQ73
KQ4
West leads the six of spades to East's ace. This is your basic dull contract which looks like a routine nine tricks. Perhaps you have been unlucky to get a spade lead. For instance, if North hadn't bid 3H, you might have gotten a heart lead allowing you ten tricks. Therefore, when East returns a spade ducked by West, you have to consider whether to finesse the ten of diamonds in order to try for ten tricks.
First, just to put your mind at ease, you cash the king of clubs. West pitches the three of hearts.
Eight fast tricks. Not nine. So where it the ninth coming from? You have two possible plays.
The answer depends on your opinion of the spades. If East returned the two, the suit rates to be 4-4 in which case, you should play on hearts. If East returned a higher spade, then spades are likely to be 5-3 in which case you have to hope for diamond finesse.
The issue here is very simple. Either you paid attention to the spade spots and made an educated decision or you didn't pay attention to the spade spots and therefore had to make an uneducated guess. If you allowed the comfort of nine apparent tricks to cloud your vision, you're in trouble. Conversely, if you ignored emotional intrusions and paid attention to the cards, then you were able to determine rather than to guess the correct play.
My BOLS TIP is: Any time you feel yourself succumbing to an emotion, whether sadness, depression, irritation, COMFORT, ELATION, OR ECSTASY, you should fight it off. STOP AND PAY ATTENTION!