Summer news

Summer news

During the summer we have worked on making LoveBridge more accessible. We are ready with our cloud-based system. This allows organizers to run tournaments without using a local server. Our system has now a simplified interface designed for clubs. With this version, it takes only a few minutes to organize a one session pairs tournament.

For our first few new clubs we have a special starter package with the possibility to rent tablets from us and enjoy a trial period to see how LoveBridge works in their own club.

Playing bridge on tablets can help cope COVID-19, without using the cards and bidding boxes, you can play in safer circumstances. Players don’t even have to touch the tablets, the starter package contains enough stylus pens for every player, what they can carry with themselves during a competition. The tablets are easy to sanitize, so you don’t have to worry about using them again in the next tournament. For more information, please contact us.

IBBF 2020

IBBF 2020

The 43rd International Budapest Bridge Festival was held successfully with a much higher participation than expected. The bridge tournaments in the past years in Hungary had less and less participants. This tendency seems to have turned around at the IBBF, with the record number of players. The entry list for the open pairs was full already one week before the tournament. We couldn’t accept any more entries because of the size of the playing area. The interest of the foreign players was also higher than the past years, 13 foreign teams were playing in the teams’ tournament, and more than half of the field was from different countries in the open pairs’ competition as well.

The opening event of the festival was a mixed pairs tournament. Based on 30 boards Bernadette Argayné Magyar and Gyula Argay achieved the best result. Gyula is a regular player on the Hungarian championships and his wife, Bernadette occasionally plays on these events. The second place was acquired by a junior player, Janka Jalsovszky, and her partner Géza Szappanos, a senior Olympic champion. The third place went for Brigitta Fischer (last year she was the most successful women bridge player in Hungary for the 6th year consecutively), playing with a regular player of the Hungarian open team, Gábor Winkler.

The second competition was a two-day-long team tournament, where we invited numerous foreign junior teams. The participants played 11×8 boards with Swiss-Danish movement.

The medalist teams are:

  1. Galim: Péter Gál – Csaba Czímer – György Kemény – Tamás Szalka
  2. Seniors Sweden: Björn Wenneberg – Lars Goldberg – UllaBritt Goldberg – Henrik Wegnelius
  3. Dumbovich: Gábor Winkler – Alon Birman – Miklós Dumbovich – Péter Lakatos

The best junior team price went to a team with mixed nationality with Czech and Croatian players. They finished 6th on the leaderboard surpassing the other 9 junior teams, congratulations to Matea Grgurić – Veronika Dolanská – Barbora Kupková – Kristijan Štefanec.
The players played 52 boards of qualification on the first day of the Open Pairs’ tournament. The 16 best pairs played in the A final the next day, the rest of the field continued competing in the B final. After 30 more boards, the final results in the A final are:

  1. Brigitta Fischer – Péter Hodosi (HUN)
  2. Csaba Szabó – Gergely Szentandrási (HUN)
  3. Błażej Krawczyk – Marcin Szymański (POL)

 

The best pairs in the B final:

  1. Richard Gabriel – Martin Vodicka (SLO)
  2. László Budai – Attila Vikor (HUN)
  3. Miklós Andrási – János Kardos (HUN)

The best junior pair (Ivan Bilusic – Emanuel Evacic) and the best U16 pair (Kacper Kuflowski – Franciszek Kurlit) also qualified tot he A final, congratulations to all of the prize winners for the good results.

Here is an exciting board from the A final:

The play started with a heart lead, and Ödön Dienes took the trick in his hand with the queen. He led the jack of spades and overtook it with the ace on the dummy. After taking the ace of heart he ruffed the ten of hearts in his hand, while West payed the jack, and East discarded his known king. At this moment the contract was in high danger, because of the king of hearts discard, soon it will be obvious why. Declarer led another high spade and overtook it with the king. Played the high diamonds, ruffed a diamond, and gave the trick to East with the queen of spades. On this very spade West discarded his nine of hearts, which was the only potential entry to his hand to lead the clubs from the right side (that’s why discarding the king and keeping the low heart could have been a very effective play). Declarer let the five of hearts taking the trick, and now Lakatos had to lead a club, letting Dienes taking the last three tricks.

Budapest MP Championship – Week 8

Budapest MP Championship – Week 8

After eight exciting weeks the Budapest MP Championship has come to an end. The two top divisions were played on LoveBridge, let’s see the results and a little insight into the details. The top three finishers in the I/A division:
  1. Miklós Dumbovich – Gábor Winkler
  2. Ödön Dienes – László Harangozó
  3. János Gellér – Dániel Tubak
The medalists in the I/B division:
  1. Miklós Fris – Gergely Kovács
  2. Gyula Bódis – Marcell Surányi
  3. Levente Kaderják – László Molnár
For the final standings click: I/A division and I/B division Congratulations to all! All the bridge experts know the Dumbovich-Winkler pair. The Hungarian field thinks about them as players having excellent declarer skills whose defense is even better. Many of you know that we created a site presenting statistics about tournaments played on LoveBridge, the Budapest MP Championship is no exception. Let’s see how good the champs were on this tournament according to our statistics: Winkler was declarer 47 times and he made 35 of his contracts, which makes him the 7th on the list of the most frequently making declarers. Dumbovich made 49 contracts out of the 66 he played, with this result he is the 8th on the same list. In average Dumbovich achieved 57.13% as declarer making him the best in the field, while Winkler got 55.66% in average, ranking 5th here. As defenders they get 57.37% in average. With this result they were the 2nd best defenders on this championship right behind the silver medalists, Dienes – Harangozó. We counted how many tricks did each player lose as declarer during the eight weeks. Dumbovich has lost 0.48 tricks per board in average, which makes him the 19th, and Winkler is not in the top 20 (only the 20 best results are public in our statistics, but the players can find their own results after they log in). According to the stats they are not amongst the top 20 opening leaders. However, when defending, Dumbovich played the least amount of trick losing cards! Dumbovich usually made 0.29 tricks more as declarer than what was expected – comparing to the double dummy analysis –, while the same value in case of Winkler is 0.28. With these results they are on the 9-10th place in this statistic. If we compare their results to the double dummy solver only after the lead, Dumbovich is the third with +0.8 tricks. As defenders, they took 0.07 more tricks than possible double dummy and they increase this value to 0.27 if we check it after the opening lead. If we only look at their bidding, they usually reached a contract where the average result in that board was 54.04% for those who played this contract. Dumbovich in average got 6.06% more than the other declarers playing the same contract, while Winkler got 4.72% more than others. You can see all of the statistics about this championship on our statistics website.
Budapest MP Championship – Week 7

Budapest MP Championship – Week 7

The penultimate round of the Budapest MP championships didn’t cause many changes on the leaderboard. In the I/A division still Miklós Dumbovich – Winkler Gábor, Dienes Ödön – László Harangozó and János Gellér – Dániel Tubak are the top three units. In the I/B division the pairs are competing for the first six qualifying places: they will play in the I/A division next year. There was only one change here, István Balásy and Katalin Tihanyi reached a place amongst the bests, pushing Zsuzsanna Kerekes and Sándor Varga to the seventh place. In board 16 of the I/A division North-South can make 7 but the small slam is makeable in spades and no trump as well. Two pairs in the field settled for 3N. The contract was 6 at seven tables, however three times out of these seven North tried to stop in 3N. Their partners saw that they are meant to play more but didn’t try for the grand after the sign off. On the remaining six tables the pairs succeeded to reach 7, although at three tables North tried to sign off in 3N as well. But how were they supposed to bid?
We liked the solution from Miklós Dumbovich and Róbert Zoller the most. Zoller bid Stayman over Dumbovich’s strong no trump and when North denied a four-card major, he introduced his diamond suit. His partner bid 3♠ showing fit in diamonds and strength in spades. Zoller’s 4was Optional Roman Keycard Blackwood and with 4♠ Dumbovich accepted the slam try promising 3 aces (4 would have denied extras). Finally, South asked about the queen of trumps and North showed it along with the king of clubs. At this point South could count 13 tricks, so he bid 7 immediately.
Budapest MP Champioship – Week 6

Budapest MP Champioship – Week 6

Two weeks, that is, two rounds are left from the Budapest MP Championships. In the I/A division the first two pairs have a small lead, but the rest of the field is quite close. An extreme result can cause more than ten place difference on the leaderboard for almost everyone. Miklós Dumbovich and Gábor Winkler are currently on the first place (just like in the past four weeks) with 56.47%, Ödön Dienes and László Harangozó has reached the second place with 54.22%, the best pair chasing after them is János Gellér and Dániel Tubak with 52.74%. In the I/B division Miklós Fris and Gergely Kovács are on the top of the leaderboard with 55.01% followed by Gyula Bódis and Marcell Surányi with 53.22% with Levente Kaderják and László Molnár on the third place with 53.10% right behind them. Here we come with an imaginative defense:

Almost everyone led a spade from South against the no trump contracts, but at this table the opener knew better from the bidding. Béla Benedek attacked the contract with the ace and queen of diamonds. Now North had all the high diamonds, he only had to gain the lead somehow. Declarer ran his hearts and after finessing the queen of spades he switched to the jack of clubs. This creative play could have been successful weren’t South been on the spot. However, Benedek knew that his partner’s only chance to take a trick is in clubs. He envisioned the nine of clubs in North’s hand so discarded the ten under the ace and played small on the next club. Imre András won the trick with the nine and cashed his diamonds. Great plan, good execution, well done!

Budapest MP Championship – Week 5

Budapest MP Championship – Week 5

On the 14th of January the fifth round of the Budapest MP championship was played and in both divisions, the daily winners were expected to perform better in the earlier rounds. The winner of this Tuesday in the I/A division is the László Szilágyi – Péter Talyigás pair and with this victory they overtook 11 pairs on the overall leaderboard closing the gap between them and the leaders. In the I/B division, the first place went to Zsuzsanna Kerekes and Sándor Varga, they are now on a qualifying place to the I/A division with their great result (best six succeeds).

It rarely happens in bridge that each player plays the best card possible (according to double dummy analysis) through a whole board. Still, this board was played “perfectly” for a while. Gábor Macskásy opened with a club, small from dummy, Brigitta Fischer followed with the ten and declarer won with the king. Orsolya Hegedüs played the ace of diamonds and discarded a club from dummy. She continued with a diamond ruff then returned a spade to her queen which South took with the king. Macskásy led another club and Fischer won the trick with the jack after the eight from West. She played the ace of clubs, declarer and South both discarding spades. Then she led her last spade and Hegedüs took it with a small heart. She ruffed a diamond on dummy and ruffed a spade in her hand while Fischer discarded her jack of diamonds. So far so good. Declarer now “put a diamond on the table*” and South found himself in an interesting position:

Holding the J432 of trumps in his hand the contract would have only gone down if he had ruffed with the jack (a highly counter intuitive move), then Hegedüs has to lose one more heart. Unfortunately, he chose a small heart letting dummy’s nine take a trick and now declarer could crossruff with the high trumps. *: remember, they were playing on tablets 😊