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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Does partner know best?

This unusual deal occurred in the recent Seniors’ Zone 7 match between New Zealand and Australia. It provided a 3 imp swing to New Zealand though far more imps perhaps should have flowed the other way. Let’s put you in the South seat.

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South Deals
E-W Vul

   

K 7 4 2

J 10 9 3

K J 8 6

Q

 

N

W

 

E

S

   
 

A 10 9 8 6 5

9 7 5 4 2

K 3

 

West

North

East

South

dummy

   

you

 

 

 

2 

Pass

3 ♣

3 

Pass

4 

All pass

 

 

You open a Multi 2Diamond-small which gets an unusual response from your partner. 3Club-small is natural and to play and tends to suggest they are very short in your Weak 2 suit. East bids their major and this is raised to game.
You lead Club-smallK and partner follows with Club-small2 as you win the trick. What is your play to trick 2?

It is rather significant. Perhaps fearing that North’s diamond trick/tricks might get ruffed or knowing that North would be very short in spades, South disregarded North’s Club-small2 signal. Since South was going to win the trick, assuming North had Club-smallA, the club played by North (they had many) should be a signal to partner about the best continuation for trick 2. The low club was clearly a signal for a diamond, the lower of the 2 non-trump suits.

However, South decided to cash Spade-smallA which produced Spade-smallQ from North and Spade-small3 from East. A spade ruff followed (declarer playing low from dummy) but trick 3 was the last trick the defence took.

South Deals
E-W Vul

Q

8 7 6 5 2

A J 9 8 7 5 2

K 7 4 2

J 10 9 3

K J 8 6

Q

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

J 3

A K Q 4

A Q 10 3

10 6 4

 

A 10 9 8 6 5

9 7 5 4 2

K 3

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

2 

Pass

3 ♣

3 

Pass

4 

All pass

 

 

 

East could win the trump return in hand, ruff a club  in dummy, draw trumps, cross to Diamond-smallK and discard their last club on the Spade-smallK, making 10 tricks. To beat this contract, South had to lead a diamond at trick 2 (Diamond-small9 asking for a spade return) with then Spade-smallQ to the ace and a second diamond ruff beating the contract. The defence can actually score 3 diamond ruffs if South leads a diamond at trick 1 and North is game enough to under-lead Club-smallA in order to score the third ruff. However, the club lead is quite understandable and should still have produced a board-winning result.

That was because of South's 4Spade-small opening bid at the other table, declarer no doubt influenced by the vulnerability. East’s double ended the bidding and after Club-smallQ lead, North did not put down the dummy of declarer’s dreams.

Declarer won with Club-smallK, ruffed a diamond in dummy and a heart in hand. They tried to score a second club trick but West ruffed. The defence ended with three diamond and three trump tricks for down 3….+500 to Australia, a potential 11 imp gain had South followed their partner’s signal in defence to 4Heart-small. Partner is sometimes right…and, of course, you do not lose the post-mortem!

Richard Solomon

 

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