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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

for Junior, Intermediate and Novice players....and others. It's FriYay.png day. 

Worth a mention?

You have not got much of a hand….but your partner has! They opened a Game Forcing 2C. So, you had better co-operate. What should you bid as North in this situation?

Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg

 

J 7

A 9 8 3

8 3

Q 8 6 5 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

2 ♣

2 

?

 

 

It’s questionable whether you should bid at this point. You have almost got a positive response to 2Club-small. You are not sure what partner will say if you pass. Pass is OK for now but so is 3Club-small. That Heart-smallA could prove rather useful.

If you pass, you should get a second chance:

 

J 7

A 9 8 3

8 3

Q 8 6 5 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

2 ♣

2 

Pass

Pass

2 ♠

Pass

?

 

 

Come on. You must show some life now. “3Club-small”. Whether you make this bid now or earlier, your partner should  use an ace – asking bid…4NT. That’s great if you play Roman Key Card Blackwood but your response even if you do not is 5Diamond-small showing one ace or key card. If you play "Key Card", partner then bids 5Heart-small asking you if you have the Club-smallQ. There are differing ways of answering “yes, I have.” Be honest, now. Answer the question. Your partner’s the boss!

Say you bid 5NT to say you have (5Spade-small would have denied it), then suddenly you hear 7Club-small from your partner. You may freeze at the thought of playing a grand slam..but then a little relief when you notice your partner bid clubs first (2Club-small)wink. You just hope they will like your dummy. They will:

South Deals
Both Vul

J 7

A 9 8 3

8 3

Q 8 6 5 4

Q J 10 5 4 2

K J 10 2

9 7 3

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Q 6 4 3

7 6

Q 9 7 6 5 4

2

 

A K 10 9 8 5 2

K

A

A K J 10

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

2 ♣

2 

Pass

Pass

2 ♠

Pass

3 ♣

Pass

4 NT

Pass

5 

Pass

5 

Pass

5 NT

Pass

7 ♣

All pass

 

 

 

South needs to play this grand-slam very carefully. Let’s say West leads Heart-smallQ. South wins in hand and draws all three of West’s trumps. (You can see what would happen if they play a top spade before doing so.cry) As long as both opponents have at least one spade each, declarer can virtually claim even if they need to ruff a spade in dummy.

However, when West discards a small heart on the Spade-smallA, South must be very careful. They must play Spade-smallJ in dummy on the first round of spades  or else they will be unable to take the necessary finesse against East. If Spade-smallJ is left in dummy and with only one entry back to hand, the contract will fail. Try the play if that happens.

However, after playing Spade-smallJ under Spade-smallA, South plays their last trump to Club-smallQ in dummy. Then comes Spade-small7 to Spade-small8 in hand (East will play low) and South can then play a third spade ruffing in dummy. A diamond to the ace and all the remaining spades in the South hand will be high, Spade-smallQ falling under Spade-smallK.

That’s tricky. It would be so sad reaching 7Club-small and then failing because of the bad spade break.

Most North-Souths failed to reach 7Club-small, playing in 6Spade-small or even 4Spade-small instead. You can make all 13 tricks in spades but only by taking the very anti-percentage play of winning the heart lead with Heart-smallA (you can crush Heart-smallK as you do not need any discard from the South hand) and running Spade-smallJ on the first round. Imagine if West had singleton or doubleton Spade-smallQ!

club suit.jpg

Certainly worth a mention!

Once you cash a top spade in the South hand, 12 tricks is the limit. However, it would be really great and not too complicated bidding to bid the grand slam in clubs. A nice time to be declarer there, too, as long as you threw that Spade-smallJ under the ace.

Richard Solomon

p.s. If you play simple Blackwood, South would have to gamble on their partner holding Club-smallQ. If North had given a positive response to 2Club-small (i.e. bid 3Club-small directly over 2Heart-small), the risk would be worth taking. 

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