The World Tour Final is an invitational event, contested by the best-performing pairs from a collection of premier events around the world in 2024; events such as the NABC, Gold Coast Teams, South American Championships, Swedish Bridge Festival and the HCL International Teams.
The two-day event was broadcast with expert commentary on the ACBL's YouTube channel, with a 30-minute delay (which allowed the players to occasionally drop in to discuss the boards they had just played).
This article will follow the journey of the two Australian / NZ pairs: Sartaj Hans and Andy Hung, and 2022 World Pairs silver medallists Nabil Edgtton and Michael Whibley.
Whibley - Edgtton took a big hit on this early board:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Edgtton | D'dakis | Whibley | Vroustis
| 2 | 2 | 4 1 | pass
| 4NT 2 | pass | 5 3 | pass
| 5 | pass | 6 | pass
| 6 | All Pass
| 1. RKCB. 2. One keycard. 3. Asking for the queen.
|
|
|
Whibley tried to offer 6

as a contract, but it was too late in the auction, and Edgtton was not willing to play in his singleton.
With the rest of the field playing in a minor, there was a lot at stake in 6

. Edgtton ruffed the

A lead, cashed the

K, and ran the diamonds, throwing all of the losers from hand. North was unable to ruff, but eventually declarer had to ruff in hand and concede two trump tricks to South, losing 15.4 imps.
The winning line was to ruff one of the first four diamonds (reentering dummy with a club finesse), to reach this ending:
QJ65
—
—
K
—
—
AJ54
—
—
8
Q
AJ86
K9
Q109
—
—Declarer throws a club on the diamond, and continues with a club from dummy. If South still refuses to ruff, declarer ruffs and endplays South in trumps.
The most impressive auction on the deal came from Plackett - Erichsen:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Plackett | Rimstedt | Erichsen | Rimstedt
| pass | 1 | 4 minors | dbl
| 6 | 6 | pass | pass
| 7 | pass | pass | 7
| dbl | All Pass |
|
|
Over Ola Rimstedt's 6

sacrifice, East's pass promised first-round control of spades, encouraging West to bid 7

. West was happy to oblige, expecting any minor-suit finesses to be working. EW would have made 7

, and they took 1400 from the 7

sacrifice, for a gain of 5.6 imps.
Sitting in different directions, both pairs picked up a large swing here:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Cima | Hung | Duboin | Hans
| Edgtton | Janiszewski | Whibley | Strzemecki
| | 4 | pass | 5
| All Pass
|
|
Michael Whibley (and Antonio Sementa at another table) led the

A to take a look at dummy, followed by the obvious club switch. The

K was the setting trick, for 6.9 imps to the defenders.
At every other table, East led a spade. Where declarer was in 5

, he ran the lead to the queen and made eleven tricks for 9.1 imps. Where declarer was in 4

, he rose with the ace and cashed the

AK, playing safe for ten tricks and a one-imp loss.
On one of the flattest boards in the event, the auction was the same at all the non-Australian tables:
West | North | East | South |
---|
| 1 | 2 | dbl
| pass | 2 | All Pass
|
|
The only exceptions to this auction were when Nabil or Sartaj were in the South seat. Playing transfers in competition, they were able to get their hearts into the auction:
West | North | East | South |
---|
| Whibley | | Edgtton
| | Hung | | Hans
| | 1 | 2 | 2 1
| pass | ?
| |
|
At this point the auctions diverged: Hung bid 3

, making the same +110 as all the pairs in 2

, while Whibley decided to give his opponents a problem and gamble on 3NT. The defenders are entitled to three spade tricks, plus the

Q and

A, but East's opening lead of the

J was fatal. Declarer won with the king and played diamonds from the top (unblocking the jack). West took his

Q and switched to spades, setting up declarer's ninth trick in that suit for 10 imps to Whibley - Edgtton.
A passive heart exit from West might have forced declarer to work harder, ultimately leading to this position after the diamonds have been cashed:
Q32
—
—
5
A7
K10
10
—
—
—
8
A10
J
K
—
Q7Declarer needs to exit with a club now (and read the ending), or else South will be squeezed when the king-ace of spades are cashed. In fact, declarer will have a slightly easier time if he shelves the last diamond, and plays a club one trick earlier – with the defenders having just three of the last five tricks, declarer can comfortably keep the

Q and

3 in hand, with the

Q and

K in dummy.
On Board 10, several declarers made 4

by guessing the

Q (or receiving a heart lead) but the contract can be made even with a losing heart guess:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Shourie | Hung | Wolpert | Hans
| | | 1 | pass
| 1 | pass | 4 | pass
| 4 | pass | 4 | All Pass
|
|
North led the

K. Declarer won with the ace, ran the

J (winning) and played another spade to the queen and Sartaj's king. Sartaj returned a third spade to East's ace, and when declarer crossed to the

K and ran the jack, he could not avoid four losers for 10.9 imps to Hans - Hung.
Despite being in the middle of an extremely bad day, 2022 World Pairs champion Krzysztof Buras showed how the hand should be played. He won the

K lead with the ace, and immediately ruffed a diamond. After crossing to the

K and ruffing a third diamond with the queen (South discarding a heart), the contract was in no danger. He eventually lost a trick to the now-bare

Q, and allowed South to take two trump tricks, but that was still ten tricks and 2.9 imps.
The transfers in competition proved their worth again on this board, with Whibley - Edgtton being the only pair to reach 4

from the right side:
One pair played in 4

after the auction started 1

-dbl-1

, but this contract failed quickly when West led a spade through dummy's king-jack. If you must be in game, this is the way to do it:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Plackett | Whibley | Erichsen | Edgtton
| | 1 | dbl | rdbl 1
| pass | 1 2 | pass | 4
| All Pass
| 1. Four or more hearts. 2. Three hearts.
|
|
|
Whibley captured the

5 lead with dummy's ace, and, with the high cards marked in the East hand, recognised that drawing trumps was the safest line of play. A heart went to the queen and king, and East returned another club. Whibley ruffed this in hand so that he could lead the next trump through East, and East rose with the ace to play a third club. Whibley won this with the

K, drew the last trump, and cashed diamonds for the rest of the tricks and 10.5 imps. If diamonds had not been 3-3, he would have had

Q onside as a backup plan.
This was the only making game on the board, but one other pair found there was some value in defending spades:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Buras | Duboin | Pszczola | Cima
| | 1 | dbl | rdbl
| 1 | pass | pass | dbl
| All Pass
|
|
Duboin and Cima defended accurately for 500:

A,

K,

Q,

A (North throwing a heart), club ruff, and North played back a low diamond to ensure that South remembered to ruff. The fourth club was ruffed, giving the defenders the first seven tricks, and declarer still had a spade loser to come (thanks to North's heart pitch on the

A, preventing declarer from reaching dummy with a heart ruff).
Here's a bidding problem (neither side vulnerable):
West | North | East | South |
---|
| 4 | pass | pass
| ?
|
|
It's a situation that many pairs might not have discussed, but it is a good idea to play 4NT here as a two-way bid: either two-suited, or a normal 5

bid. Using this method, you can play a direct 5

bid (bypassing 4NT) as showing slam interest.
The field was mostly split between 5

and 4NT; the 4NT bidders, and just one of the 5

bidders, were raised to 6

.
One West took a different approach:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Fleisher | Hung | Martel | Hans
| | 4 | pass | pass
| 6 | pass | 7 | All Pass
|
|
Presumably with no way to show a good 5

bid, Fleisher chose an overbid of 6

, and his partner felt that two keycards might be enough to provide the thirteenth trick.
The full deal:
The grand slam was one off, for 11.9 imps to Hans - Hung.
Judging from the fact that all of the 4NT bidders were raised to 6

, it seems that these pairs were playing 4NT as stronger than 5

. I prefer to play the direct 5

as the stronger bid, to avoid ambiguity in this auction:
West | North | East | South |
---|
| 4 | pass | pass
| 4NT | pass | 5 | pass
| 5 | pass | ?
|
|
If 5

can be either a normal hand with clubs and hearts, or a very strong hand with hearts, it will be impossible for East to know when to bid on.
Today, East bid 5

over 4NT, so the 5

rebid was unambiguous – West would correct 5

to 5

with a two-suited hand – but that just strikes me as a lucky escape for this method. If East's diamonds had been longer than his clubs, he would have bid 5

instead of 5

, and would have interpreted West's correction to 5

as a two-suiter with clubs and hearts, rather than a strong hand.
This next board is remarkable because three of the eight EW pairs bid and made 3NT with six top losers. See if you think you would have done better than the three world-class pairs who let 3NT make here:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Hans | Hurd | Hung | Bathurst
| | | | pass
| 1 | 1 | 3 1 | pass
| 3NT | All Pass
|
|
North led the

9, won by declarer's king. If West had shown a stopper, this lead makes some sense (playing South for an entry to lead through the

Qxx) but it doesn't seem right when East was the one who made the decision to bid 3NT.
Not a great start for the defence, but declarer still had only eight tricks. He ran the diamonds and clubs, putting South on lead with the third club in this position:
10
AK108
—
—
643
A
J3
Q4
—
—
—
64
Q85
96
—
—Looking at all four hands, this looks like a trivial problem, but sometimes even the best players can fall victim to a faulty line of reasoning. South felt that North would have led a heart from ace-king-sixth (I know I would) so he played for this equally-unlikely layout:
106
A108
—
—
43
A
KJ3
Q4
—
—
—
64
Q85
96
—
—Assuming the contract to be unbeatable, South played a spade, attempting to prevent the overtrick. An unexpected ten tricks for Sartaj, for 8.4 imps.
There were two other tables where 3NT made. Welland - Auken had a similar auction, but with West implying a stopper, and North led a fourth-best heart, conceding the ninth trick immediately. But my favourite result was Jerome Rombaut, who bid 3NT over a 3

opening. South led the

6, and Rombaut put up dummy's jack. Believing the lead to be from

64, Pszczola ducked to maintain communications.
Having worked their way up to fourth and seventh place, Hans - Hung and Edgtton - Whibley now had to play each other. The match was uneventful, with a small loss seeing Hans - Hung fall just one position.
In the next match, both of our pairs gained 9 imps on this board:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Percario | Hung | Donati | Hans
| | | 1NT | pass
| pass | dbl | All Pass
|
|
Declarer won the spade lead with the queen, and had time to set up just one minor-suit trick for three tricks in total, and 1100 to the Aussies.
Only three of the eight NS pairs managed to take a large penalty on this deal, with some pairs failing to find the double of 1NT on the North cards, and one player inexplicably pulling the double with the South cards.
With neither partner having a five-card suit, and no guarantee of an eight-card fit, it’s theoretically a losing proposition to run from 1NT doubled, but with not much to lose, the American pair gave it an optimistic shot:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Bathurst | Whibley | Hurd | Edgtton
| | | 1NT | pass
| pass | dbl | pass | pass
| rdbl | pass | 2 | dbl
| rdbl | pass | 2 | pass
| pass | dbl | 2 | dbl
| All Pass
|
|
2

was a worse spot than 1NT, with 1400 on offer, but our boys weren’t unhappy collecting 1100.
The benefit of running in these auctions, is that you might not get doubled in your new contract, but this benefit is more likely to arise if you start running before you are doubled. Roy Welland won the board for his side by getting out early, taking advantage of his non-standard methods over 1NT:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Welland | Duboin | Auken | Cima
| | | 1NT | pass
| 2 1 | pass | 2 2 | pass
| pass | 2 | All Pass
|
|
2

is clearly a worse contract than 1NT, but we live in a world of takeout doubles – the worse a contract is, the harder it is to double it. North’s 2

made 11 tricks, a far cry from the 1400 available in 2

doubled.
In the penultimate match, Sartaj and Andy played Pszczola - Buras, who were running in last place. This high-scoring match has been reported in full in the ABF Newsletter, and at the end of that match, Sartaj and Andy had taken a large lead in the event with just one six-board match to go.
In the final match, Hans - Hung faced Versace - Sementa, who were running in third place, while 5th-placed Whibley - Edgtton faced Donati - Percario who were out of contention in 9th place.
The match did not begin well for Hans - Hung:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Hans | Sementa | Hung | Versace
| | | | pass
| 1 | dbl | 2 1 | pass
| 4 | 4 | pass | pass
| 5 | All Pass
| |
|
Sartaj's 5

bid looks like the normal action, and four other Wests also bid on to the five-level over 4

(although Sartaj was the only one who mentioned the diamonds). Failing in 5

was an 8-imp loss for Hans - Hung, but they were guaranteed a loss on the board as soon as North bid 4

. Two Norths did not find the 4

sacrifice over 4

(leaving EW with 620 or 790), and one South sacrificed over 6

(EW 800).
The scores were packed tightly going into the last couple of boards, with Delimpaltadakis - Vroustis slightly ahead of Sementa - Versace and Hans - Hung, and Whibley - Edgtton some way off the pace in fifth behind Welland - Auken.
The last two boards were both eight-card heart fits with EW, with 27 HCP on the first and 26 HCP on the second, and uninteresting NS hands, so there wasn't much hope of a bidding swing. Still, with less than an imp separating the top three places, Hans - Hung were in with a chance if they could generate an overtrick on one of the boards.
On Board 23, Joe Grue and Brad Moss bid a poor slam, going off and donating imps to all of the other EW pairs who were all in 4

(including Hans - Hung and Whibley - Edgtton) at the expense of the NS pairs (including the two leading pairs). This was more than enough for Hans - Hung to take the lead – and, just to be safe, they also managed to find the overtrick imp they needed in
4
.
They extended their lead on the final board:
West | North | East | South |
---|
Welland | Plackett | Auken | Erichsen
| 1 | 1 | pass | pass
| dbl | 2 | dbl | All Pass
|
|
The 1

opening looks a little strange, and this is because EW open all balanced hands (outside the 14-16 1NT range) with 1

, including those with a five-card major. This placed them in the unusual position of defending 2

in a nine-card fit, with an undisclosed eight-card major fit of their own. West's double of 2

suggests a penalty double of 1

, rather than a strict takeout of clubs, so West's pass was not completely unreasonable, but 2

doubled made for EW 180, knocking Welland - Auken down to sixth place.
Martin Fleisher, playing a similar method, also opened 1

on the West cards, and he also failed to find the heart fit, ending in 3NT down two on the

A lead. Meanwhile, Grue and Moss also doubled 2

for -180 on the same auction as Welland and Auken (although their 1

opening was Precision).
These three pairs, all failing to find their 26-point heart game, produced a total loss of 25 imps, which were distributed as plus scores to the other five EW pairs (again, at the expense of the NS pairs). Hans - Hung collected 4.5 imps for making 420, and Whibley - Edgtton collected 5.2 imps for their 450, while NS pairs Delimpaltadakis - Vroustis and Sementa - Versace fell by the same amounts.
The final scores:
1 Sartaj Hans - Andy Hung +50.74
2 Nabil Edgtton - Michael Whibley +40.25
3 Antonio Sementa - Alfredo Versace +38.71
I've shown a lot of boards where the winners benefited from errors by their opponents, because even at top level, that's how events like this are decided. In an interview by Rob Barrington, Sartaj was asked for his thoughts on the error rate in the world-class field:
"Last night after we won, I felt that we got incredibly lucky. We got some big boards and some big gifts, and I thought we just got lucky. But this morning when I woke up, I reflected on the two days, and I thought, yeah, we got our share of luck, but we didn't do too many crazy, silly things ourselves, and maybe that was the reason we won. So I'm feeling a bit more of a worthy winner today." Andy added, "The luck runs pretty evenly amongst everyone... it's all about limiting the disasters that happen to you along the way."
Barrington summed up: "Steve Weinstein says we're all basically terrible; we're all trying to make the best of our worst decisions as many times as possible, and the best players and the best pairs just kind of navigate those minefields. You guys did a great job of that in your two days."
Congratulations Andy and Sartaj!