Lowering the Bar on Awarding Stimulus Money

Let’s try to get money for a project to study how closing your eyes heps you sleep.  That isn’t much worse than the bold-faced portion of this recent AP report.  In fact, I’d say it entitles us to at least $200,000 in federal money.

Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro says the National Institute of Health is funding projects that focus on basic research to improve the quality of life and reduce the burdens of illness and disability.

Yale is getting funding for research on global health problems and a project to study how paying attention improves performance of difficult tasks.

The UConn Health Center will use the money for cancer research.

salfromthebronx

Living Will

When I throw out the first pitch, and it is equal to or less than Ted Kennedy’s effort (youtube clip pending), please pull the plug.

HR Melvin

One Milf, Two Milf

One handed reading is out of fashion. One hand for the musculus, the other for the mus, nowadays. And of course this is all as it should be. Far be it from me to shout up the feeble powers of our atrophied imaginations, to suggest that in the face of  Gutenberg’s “Dying Gaul” routine we should seek the fodder of erotic fantasy in mere text! There is our imagination–useful both for the re-purposing of remembered sexual experience as accompaniment for the solitary act and for enacting such pure hypotheticals as “what if both of the daughters on Kate and Allie were my girlfriend?”–and there is porn. Yes, porn kills our higher faculties of erotic resource-deployment, but kind of the way high fructose corn syrup kills waiting two starving weeks in a hole for one chance at bagging a prairie chicken with a rock. That is, art and experience take a hit, but boy, does efficiency shoot up. And that foodish shit is pretty tasty, once in a while (several times a week, that is).

But we’ve forgotten something–what if dexter is grappling a book with pictures? And what if the off-hand is steadying something altogether more wholesome? (I do not refer to a regular polyhedron and MM3.5p198.) In such a case, can we reclaim our reading lives, if not as opportunities for actual self-abuse, as foraging expeditions for the fodder of future fantasies? The mind is the original parallel processor, images are images, and the male brain is the male brain–surely we can do whatever it is we are doing and still upload printed images directly to the xxx drive, all undetected by the outside world?

But who reads picture books? Aha: there is a growing demographic in this little bloughgosphere of those who find themselves, or will shortly find themselves, reading picture books for the benefit of local youth. Wholesome, very wholesome. And these same bloughers (rhyme: duffers) no doubt find themselves short of free time–and yet the reading of picture books is not intellectually taxing, and the brain–in my case, as will shortly become relevant, the heterosexual male brain–will frequently task most surplus processing capability toward sexual fantasy.

But these are wholesome books! They feature babies, talking animals, small children, mute animals, frolicking families, farm animals, and even large and passive anthropomorphic bunnies who speak as if possessed of a slightly sub-human but fully self-conscious and suffering intelligence. What sort of sick fuck could have fantasies in such a situation? Well, er, yes. But a clarification, followed by an objection, dear interlocutor! First: we are not speaking of actual fantasizing, we are speaking of the inexpungeable (and–thanks for the suggestion–also inexpugnable) instinct to assess any female form (I operate on personal authority, now), within the limits of sexual possibility, that might heave into view. This is the hording of surplus for when the house is asleep and the image-hoard can be rifled and put to use. (Well, maybe it never is, because, again, you’d have to cook up those images into something more satisfying… and those sugary snacks are right there on the old CRT monitor. This point is, really, not about masturbation but simply about the sexual appraisal of the female literary object… it’s just that masturbation is so literary a topic, and still perhaps carries some feeble charge of naughtiness!) Second: many children’s books are primarily devoted to demonstrating family life to the young child, to modeling family behavior, or they at least take care to set the protagonist’s activity in what is meantto be a familiar family setting. Siblings, usually; dad, often. And most often of all, Mom. (In the books for the really little ones; this is less the case in books aimed at slightly older children, the already-halfway-to-the-orphaned-hero-of-adventure-and-romance Cat in the Hat books, where Mom is rarely more than a limb and a looming presence, on which see below.)

Does this post make hackneyed and seedy references to masturbation? Yes, it does. Does it praise pornography? Mm-hm. And is it otherwise complicit in the objectification of women? Sure thing. Does it uncomfortably juxtapose child care and adult sexuality? You betcha. But all in the service of truth, motherfucker. Would you have me lie? Would you have me smother the awkward reality, taking that first step down the road to secretive depravity? And, for fuck’s sake, ladies, it’s not that big a deal. First, if Tori Amos can self-identify as a Milf, my feminist papers are in order. Second, how many times more wholesome for those of us in this laudable and unsexy time of life to take sexual interest in women of a certain age and status? Our unenlightened brethren befoul the culture by lusting after the eternal barely legal, even as they close in on doubling that age. So give a thought for the picture book milfs, instead of neglecting the DVR and letting your thoughts wander during a Hooters commercial or those Girls Gone Wild spots that air during the re-broadcast of the Daily Show you had to tape because you were still taping two basketball games at 11:00. My e-rectitude is unimpeachable here–I am reading to children! I am praising the sexuality of strong, boldly-drawn women in their 30s and 40s! (I don’t imagine I can be the first to have coined “e-rectitude,” but praise me with great praise if I have.)

Enough preamble, time for the gift of blough: my time and mental energy is hereby turned to public service. You might have to select a picture book to read someday. When that day comes, remember, and think well of me.

The Ten Hottest Picturebook Milfs

1. The Baby Goes Beep. A family romance, here. We take the role of daddy, rather than the milf-cruiser or gentleman caller. This is one of those mommas who finds the full-bore satisfaction of family life to be engaging all sorts of appetites. The luxuriant hair, the slight curves and the sinuous movement hold much promise–this is woman who dresses for action and knows how to move. And just check out the cuddling on the last page. Smart-ass baby thinks they’re asleep? Ah, but soon you will be, and there are other rooms in the house for mommy and daddy to romp in. The rather broad planes of the face might be a turn-off for some, but this is of a piece with the the broad-brush-strokes approach chosen by the artist. This choice allows both baby-pleasing fullness of form and the impressionistic suggestion of powerful sexuality. This is most effectively conveyed, and the hair and body overshadow the vagueness of mere facial features.

2. Knuffle Bunny (Willems). Now, your small-breasted Brooklyn hipster is not for everyone. This momma is a bit uptight, a bit on the straight-laced-and-nervous side. But you know she’s a step ahead of that goofy sensitive-guy dad in more ways than one. You know what that face means: this isn’t the first time you’ve gone scrabbling after something limp and soggy. “Why don’t you take Trixie to the Bronx Zoo tomorrow–I’ll stay home and wait for the plumber.”

3. A Baby Blessing (Wireman). This queer cross-generational gift addition to our library consists of hackneyed “blessings” penned by “Welleran Poltarnees” amidst a choice selection of early 20th century (i.e. public domain) illustrations. It’s saccharine-infused sentimentality… even learning that the compiler’s pen-name cites two different Dunsany stories only serves to underscores the oddity of the period-obsession, rather than to partly redeem its ickiness. A terrible book. But the milfs are crafty, and lurk even in the strangest corners of ersatz-religious recycling projects drawing on century-old how-to manuals. A salute to you, Katharine Wireman, illustrator of How to Bring Up A Baby, for being a light for us in dark places, and for hitting us not only with the wasp-waist and puffy sleeves of the period but with a timeless image of sloe-eyed, marble-browed pulchritude… and also for so brilliantly anticipating (the anticipation of) the librarian-letting-down-her-hair cliche. The beauty of the scene is there in the inscribed meaning, but it is the semi-intentional hint of milfiness in the demure three-quarter profile pose (not the frank full-frontal availability we get elsewhere) that makes it work. This is a beautiful woman, and somebody is going to have to fetch the cocaine-laced unguent and massage those corset-marks. Mystery and historicity, but high, high upside.

4. Blueberries for Sal (McClosky). I’m going to take some flack for this. Mama plays within herself, here, it’s true. The haircut and silhouette are reminiscent of late-maniacs Natalie Merchant; if that’s not your cup of tea, well, fine–then she’s lower down your list. She’s a woman, with woman’s hips, (but these are blown out of proportion by the flared 50s-ish skirt) and close-set eyes. There is a reserve and a primness–though she is still rather fetching–when putting up blueberries or setting out in her trim little berry-picking jacket. But see this momma startled by a bear cub, and you get not only a better look at a slim profile but also a strong sense of beguiling physicality.

5. Everywhere Babies (Frazee). Strenuously politically correct and cloyingly illustrated, this cutesy-wootsy horror sketches moms and dads in various attitudes of exhaustion, cuddling, and exhausted cuddling. Very cloying. And politically correct: lots of different sorts of babies, and lots of different sorts of parents. Still trailing the play? …I want some LESBIAN action on my milf list. Three options–a blandly cute interracial lesbian couple sleeping atop each other while one rocks a cradle, an equally bland interracial lesbian couple (indistinguishable but for different hairstyles, but such are the limitations of talent here–the hairstyles are surely used to indicate their distinctness from earlier moms) walking their twins, and a still-bland but distinctly cuter, long-legged, light-skinned black woman romping with young twins. A lesbian? Perhaps–those twins look like the other twins, but then again she has different hair, so perhaps not. And really short arms, since the artist can’t quite manage the hands-and-knees “horsey ride” position she has attempted. Not working from life models, here. The hottest milf in this book? The passed-out-in-a-rocking chair-presumably-nursing-mother. She too, is reading, while holding a baby. And she has pretty hair. And let’s take the thrown-back head and open mouth as “erotic repose.” So, let’s get the horsey-mommy, the first lesbian couple, and the sleepy mommy together and shoot our milf orgy all the way to number five, bland and sexless drawing and all.

6. D’Aulaire’s Greek Myths (D’Aulaire). Yes, that’s right, I’m picking Demeter. This is an awesome book, a fact not terribly relevant here, and the illustrations can tend toward the hazily impressionistic, the goddesses toward “for statuesque read blocky.” But there is a lot of emphasis on the Persephone story, and Demeter gets it done in two different illustrations: dandling the baby Persephone in the Olympian group shot and receiving the teenage daughter back from Hades (a sub-genre implies itself). The big goddesses are physically imposing and unfeminine, but Demeter is relatively demure, a pretty blonde–an odd distinction among the immortals, but still. Hot Olympian Mom–just catch her in the Spring or Summer.

7. The Cat in the Hat (Seuss). Because the good doctor needs to be on the list. And, given the author’s style, we are lucky to get even the hint of non-satirized human form. My Seuss knowledge is not exhaustive, but as far as I can tell, the only competition for this spot comes from the matronly, scalloped-collared, sagging-everything mom on pages 58-9 of Hop on Pop, and that ain’t happening. No, it is the absent mother of The Cat in the Hat. Her absence is in fact quite suggestive–why does she leave such young children at home? An assignation? And why is the fish so terrified of her wrath? Something is going on here. So, although we see glimpse only a leg, through the window, and then the same shapely leg and a casually waving right hand as she enters, this mystery milf is bringing it home.

8. Be-bim Bop (Park). While connoisseurs of pornography will be confused by the categorization of an Asian woman as… well, any other category that “Asian,” (“Wait a minute, it just said ‘blowjob!’ That should mean a white girl giving a blow job!”) here we have a lithe and attractive young milf. She is badly drawn, her hairstyle is implausible, and throughout the book she appears generally as an unremarkable torso involved in kitchen work. All reasonable criticisms, hence her lowly position on this list. But check out the first page, the supermarket scene–this is a hot mom. And who is to complain that she spends much of the book cooking… just for you?

9. Going on a Bear Hunt (Oxenbury). This one is a problem. The cover shows only dad, a toddler, and two older tykes. Then a winsome blonde appears, in such a way as to be easily taken for the eldest daughter–the infantile features and Anglocentric cartoon minimalism make age-typing difficult, and the flowing dress and loose hair certainly convey girlishness. But it seems, upon further investigation, that we have a rather youthful mom. The granny panties revealed (a strange choice, by both character and illustrator) in the fording scene are one clue, her role in shoeing the kids and carrying the toddler throughout the latter pages are another, but perhaps only the hugging of daddy at the cave and the final glimpse of a much more suggestively adult profile are close to dispositive. So–she’s very pretty, maybe the prettiest of all. But if you can be mistaken for a tween, you’re not exactly nailing down the milf aesthetic. So, 9th.

10. Waiting for Baby (Kubler). O.k., first, as the title suggests, mom is pregnant (see the categorization comments at 8, above). Inexplicably, she wears overalls. And the soft-tone pastels are not conducive to close assessment of physical form. Then there is the mom haircut and the dopey smiles… so the conditions are tough, here. But she seems to be very cute, and obliging. The same mom appears in My New Baby, and there is a little side-boob while nursing, if you’re into that. Rock on.

Honorable Mentions, Milfs of the 70s division: Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day (Cruz, 1972), Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (Barrett, 1978). Two sturdy-looking women in shapeless skirts, questionable-to-awful tops, and schmattes. Meatballs is ahead on body but has an implausibly large-featured face, while poor Alexander’s mom has even worse clothes and the broad-shouldered, small-breasted frame that screams “maternal drudgery.” So they don’t make the list, because they are… not attractive. But don’t hate the playa, hate the era.

Grumble

The Bruce Chen Challenge

vnueva’s challenge below led me to the roster of the 1991 Red Sox, that year being selected at random from the post-1990-but-early-’90s, when Sox pitching staffs were particularly old and ineffective. And there I re-discovered Tony Fossas, whose longstanding ineptitude is deserving of comment. In 12 big league seasons, Fossas’ 415 innings of relief for seven teams yielded 434 hits and an inexcusable 180 walks, for a WHIP of 1.48. Twelve years! In 1999, after which MLB owners finally determined that that season should be his last, Fossas appeared in just 5 games with the Yankees, all over a two-week period in May. Total innings pitched: 1.0. ERA: 36.00. (Insult to injury: in his 12 seasons, Fossas had a single at-bat. He grounded into a DP.)

When I went to look up Bruce Chen on Baseball Almanac, I clicked by mistake on Chin-Fing Chen. Fortuitous mistake — Chen-Fing had a four-year career this decade and collected all of two hits, in 22 at-bats, for a lifetime average of .091.

Unrelated: today we had a visitor to the blog who reached Vnueva’s post “Maddux pi QED” by entering the Yahoo search “what is the fraction closest to pi?”

E.H.

NL Bruce Chen

I liked calling the division that back in 2001, when the one-time #4 overall prospect for Baseball America was on his third NL East team at the age of 24. Then he went to the Expos the next year, as if pre-ordained. Sadly, he hasn’t made it to the Marlins yet, although he’s worn 5 other major league uniforms, 12 minor league uniforms, and is in the Royals camp this year. Aside from accidentally going 13-10 for the Orioles in 2005 (since he went 2-1 the year before and 0-7 the year after) Mr. Chen never won more than 4 games for any single team in a single season. Fellow tolerable lefty Dennis Cook managed to win 4 in April, 1999 (I remembered this as a 5-0 start, but #5 came on May 2.)

 

And he still wound up with a career record of 35-37 with no saves. I could say “and counting,” but I’m hoping that even the Royals have standards. So I put it to fellow arbiters to locate a career of comparable length and non-performance.

 

vnueva

Frisman Jackson, Jr. Hates Russians

There’s a confession to be made, and it is this: Frisman Jackson, Jr. loves his hockey. That’s going to sound improbable to Frisman’s readers, but Frisman can tell you it goes back to baby-Frisman times, when some fucker kept calling Frisman “Canadian.” Frisman wasn’t too sure what that douche was talking about, but there was definitely a response along the lines of, “Frisman’s going to skate circles around you,” and on it went. Frisman doesn’t remember exactly how it went down, but he’s pretty sure that dude drowned in a lake. Clarence can check the records. Fuck him anyway.

 

So Frisman is rested up for the real hockey season, which everybody knows begins after the Superbowl. (Frisman is not on board for the poseur who says the season begins with the playoffs, sit your ass down on the sofa in February and bone up, don’t tell Frisman you’re hardcore because you stayed up to watch the first OT in Cal-gary, especially if the game went double). There’s only 30 games left, suck it up.

 

Getting into his groove, Frisman checks the leaderboard, and it’s nice to see a bunch of fellow Canadians up there beating back the commie spies. Hey sadfatman, how do you get the one word hyperlinks? Clarence can’t figure this out. Appleworks is a little slow.

 

http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/stats/bycategory?cat=Offense&conference=NHL&year=season_2008&sort=1

 

Well Frisman will just tell you what it says: Ovechkin is on top with 41 goals, and a whole bunch of guys who never get a mention on espn are after him in the low 30s. (It’s pretty clear that they’re only allowed to talk hockey using the words Sidney, Crosby, Ovechkin, a smattering of Malkin, and an assload of Slapshot jokes. Canadian or not, Frisman thinks Slapshot is crud.)

 

But Frisman doesn’t cut corners. Here’s the top 11 (yeah Professor, 11) goalscorers, with their shots and percentage. For the uninitiated, .15 is very good, rates above that are often the guys who plant in the crease and hack away. Like a big man in hoops who gets “free” attempts at tip ins, which are only counted when they go in, the scrum in front won’t register as an official attempt unless the puck goes in. Under .1 is terrible, the domain of defensemen who are trying to generate tips and rebounds.

 

 Name

Team

 

G

 

 

Shots

 

Pct

 AlexanderOvechkin

WAS

 

41

 

 

363

 

.113

 Jeff Carter

PHI

 

34

 

 

239

 

.142

 Zach Parise

NJD

 

34

 

 

249

 

.137

 Marian Hossa

DET

 

33

 

 

245

 

.135

 Patrick Marleau

SAN

 

32

 

 

184

 

.174

 Thomas Vanek

BUF

 

32

 

 

164

 

.195

 Ilya Kovalchuk

ATL

 

29

 

 

197

 

.147

 Michael Cammalleri

CGY

 

29

 

 

170

 

.171

 Loui Eriksson

DAL

 

27

 

 

124

 

.218

 Dany Heatley

OTT

 

26

 

 

170

 

.153

 Evgeni Malkin

PIT

 

25

 

 

211

 

.118

 

This is a travesty. Where is hockey sabremetrician Guillame James to straighten this out? Ovechkin is Vinny Castilla times Joe Carter, peppered with a little Allen Iverson (early years) and greased with some Rey Ordonez, just to make sure. And that other russki Malkin pulls the same shit. Shooting percentage doesn’t mean as much in hockey as rate statistics in other sports, but face it, this guy is a chucker. He’s outpacing the other gunners in shots by about 50%, but only getting a few more goals out of it. Frisman appreciates that the good players take more shots because they can get them, but this guy blows.

 

Go back to Russia. Leave the hockey to the Canadians.

 

And the Canadians.

Frisman Jackson, Jr.

Oh God

Because nothing is less relevant to “the greater good” than batting .500:

But Manuel also said he was confident Reyes wouldn’t resist a change because “it would be best for the team.” And a significant portion of what Manuel intends to preach to his players this spring involves putting the team before the individual. He said, “The game takes precedent over individuals stats,” and variations on that theme several times.

The manager even went so far as to suggest a player who goes hitless in four at-bats but does the “little things” to help the team in one game might be rewarded the following day and have a better chance to play than a teammates who had two hits in four at-bats but did nothing to enhance the greater good. Manuel called it “kind of a ticklish situation” and noted, “We have to applaud and celebrate the little things.”

He made a point to say he didn’t believe his players behaved selfishly on the field last season “to a point that it stood out.” But now, with the Rays’ “9=8” mantra resonating throughout the game and evidence that the approach has worked well for Mike Scioscia’s Angels teams, Manuel indicated ways to enhance his players’ selflessness do exist. He said he intends to emphasize that.

“There’ll be a lot of conversations,” he said.

Full article here.

-sadfatman

I have nothing further

fail-owned-first-time-fail

–EH

Stratwatch

Slightly After Midseason Report:

 

The Gentleman’s C is pulling ahead with a 15-6 record. Smallball leads the way, a team average of just .268 is countered by starting pitchers yielding only 27 walks in 21 games.  Remaining games include hosting the Urban Sombrero for 3 more and a full slate with Stateless Kent.

 

Mulligatawny is middling at 11-11. They host Kent for 4 more and have 6 with the Monks of Rangoon.

 

MVP Watch

For Mulligatawny, Ichiro is humming at a .467 clip (more than 2 hits per game), but getting little help from the rest of the boys, except for Glaus’s injury/steroid-induced 7 HR in 46 AB. Some nice work by Mauer, pushing .959 OPS, but missing a lot of ball.

 

But for the C, Eric Byrnes is cruising at .424, with an OPS approaching 1.200, and leads in runs at 21 in as many games. Based on overcoming-an-average-card criteria, he’s locking this race up. Eric Chavez is hanging in with an 1.100 OPS.

 

Cy Young Watch

Radke is looking solid at 5-1, 2.79 for the C, who are holding down an unlikely 3.51 team ERA with 8 saves (6 for Rincon, unheard of in this organization). Harden is the only bright light for Mulligatawny, 3-1 2.39.  They have 1 save, and a team ERA pushing 5.

 

Crapwatch

Herioc CF work cannot mask Torii Hunter’s .155 average, but 6 HR and 20 RBI have kept him hitting cleanup all year. But the Crap award is already locked up by Cuddyer, who’s 4 for 43.

 

Mismanagement Watch

Mulligatawny, with way too many OF and not enough pitching, has 10 remaining games, with 7 available starts and 28 innings, meaning if it gets all complete games and no extra innings, it has 1 inning of flexibility. See below.

 

The C has 11 games left and only 5 dedicated starts. They have 61 innings left to spread over the remaining 6 games, which sadly means a lot of Terry Mulholland

 

Rules Clarifications

Will or Sal, please chime in.

 

1) Did we ever kill the rule that non-slash starters can use 2 2/3 innings of tired mop-up/extra innings work which wouldn’t count as a start? This work can only be used assuming they’re not pitching the day before or day after, which probably became not used in the series at all. I know we killed the early blowout is not a start rule, but I think this one is still good.

 

2) Reliever can come into a game as long as he has 1/3 inning available, and doesn’t have to come out right away. Don’t know the codification status of this one, but it was certainly digested in email way back. My recollection is they get tired fast and can’t stay long, so a 1 is tired as soon as his innings are up and has to come out when he is 1 over his season cap. A 2 or 3 can get up to 1 healthy inning after he’s capped-out, and then another of automatically tired, and then has to come out.

 

vnueva

Great Bridge Hands of 1996

Sitting in the dining hall sometime in early winter, Trigger had invited one of his professors to play bridge, and decided to partner with him. I have some recollection of whom I was partnered with, but since I am not completely sure and it is immaterial to the event, I omit his name.


I don’t recall the professor’s name, he was in his 50’s, and the best I can describe him is to say Trigger might as well have been playing with a time-machine version of himself. His ability was no better than Trigger’s (which, to be fair, was on par with my own).


So my partner and I bid ourselves into a slam, I declare and a quick survey of the dummy reveals that we’ve managed to get there missing Ace-King of trumps, and hold only 10 total. The bidding was sound, the hands strong enough to justify this unlikely error, although if there was error it was mine, as dummy held Queen high, leaving me a rather weak trump run to encourage slam. But we hold all remaining meaningful points, so the bid is understandable, and no-trump likely would have run into the same defect. (I’ve frequently been reminded that most hands play out as no-trump would, so a slam built on points might as well be no-trump).


A peek at my opponents reveals no untoward giddiness, as one should have if holding Ace-King against a slam contract. I will grant that this detail is probably a revised memory, as the contract would have been defeated then and there and this story mooted. But whether I knew their holdings or not, I could only think of one card arrangement which I could defeat.


Trigger sat to my right, and he would be the mark, again contingent upon him having a specific card holding. Luckily, the board was fairly weak. This served two purposes: I controlled most high cards; and Trigger would feel compelled to gain the lead to send something through my strength, hoping the Professor held an off King or Queen.

I prey upon this instinct with the first few tricks by appearing to destroy communication with the board, drawing a few rounds of off-suits in an apparent attempt to gather information of my opponents holdings. Then, with the board reasonably stripped, I lead the Queen of Trumps. Trigger dutifully covers with the King, perhaps correctly, how can one know? If truly finessed this play is odds-on, as it either severs communication with the board when I play my Ace, or if his partner holds the missing Jack with a low trump, it would be promoted. Either way, had Trigger smoothly ducked, I merely let the Queen ride and repeat the finesse, so both I and he believe the play sound.

But no, declarer plays low, Trigger’s King rules the trick until… the Professor plays his singleton Ace! The gods have rescued the damned contract by saddling opponents with the only fallible combination possible: Trigger holds King-low, believes he is being finessed, and the singleton Ace must drop behind it. Your author promptly lays down, victory assured.

The Professor feels somehow betrayed by his partner, conscripted into this defeat, as if his Ace alone entitled him to the hand. He berates his partner for the poor play, the Declarer sits quietly, and this proves to be the final hand. To this day I still am unsure whether the Professor was correct: if Trigger had played low he surely would have expected me to simply draw his King on the next trick; why would he have possibly thought I had bid slam missing Ace-King, after all, I hadn’t thought that and I bid it!


A grand day indeed.

vnueva