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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

The successful finesse.

The Successful Line.

We would all like to find it, especially on troublesome deals like today’s one. This deal produced many casualties in the qualifying rounds of last weekend’s South Island Pairs.

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East Deals
N-S Vul

Spade-small

J 5 4

Heart-small

7 2

Diamond-small

J 9 4 3

Club-small

K J 10 7

   

N

W

 

E

S

   
 

Spade-small

A K Q 8 6

Heart-small

K 6 3

Diamond-small

K 10 6

Club-small

A 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

Pass

2 Diamond-small

2 Heart-small

Pass

Pass

2 NT

Pass

3 Club-small

Pass

3 Spade-small

Pass

4 Spade-small

All pass

 

South opened a Multi 2Diamond-small which included a balanced 20-21 or 19 with a 5-card suit, as evidenced above. After West’s overcall, South was careful not to bid 2Spade-small which might sound like a Weak 2. North checked for a 5-card major with 3Club-small and South announced then their 5-card spade suit.

4Spade-small was the popular contract and a small trump was the popular lead. What is your proposed line?

At some tables but by no means all, West had overcalled. West had sometimes overcalled a 1Spade-small opening, sometimes not. Where West had remained silent, one option was to play for the Heart-smallA to be with East. Win Spade-smallJ at trick 1 and play a heart towards the king. If that scores, give up a heart and ruff one, losing just a heart and two diamonds.

That line seemed almost doomed where West had overcalled. So, another approach could be to win Spade-smallJ and play on diamonds, hoping for a well-placed Diamond-smallQ. Again, chances of that being successful were not great. West was favourite to hold that card.

Both the above lines were doomed to failure. A few declarers received help from West in the form of a club lead or switch from West and scraped home. One declarer found a successful route surprisingly after West had remained silent.

The trump lead, a very good one for the defence, suggested West held defensive values, aces, perhaps even AQs. If that was the case, it would be a good idea to keep East off lead for as long as possible:

East Deals
N-S Vul

Spade-small

J 5 4

Heart-small

7 2

Diamond-small

J 9 4 3

Club-small

K J 10 7

Spade-small

7 3 2

Heart-small

A Q J 10 4

Diamond-small

A Q

8 6 3

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

10 9

Heart-small

9 8 5

Diamond-small

8 7 5 2

Club-small

Q 9 5 2

 

Spade-small

A K Q 8 6

Heart-small

K 6 3

Diamond-small

K 10 6

Club-small

A 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

Pass

2 Diamond-small

Pass

2 Heart-small

Pass

2 NT

Pass

3 Club-small

Pass

3 Spade-small

Pass

4 Spade-small

All pass

 

Note West's silence. 

This South won the opening lead in hand and cashed a second high spade, maybe taking away a safe exit card from West (though here West did hold 3 trumps). Next came Club-smallA and a second club to the king in dummy, to be followed by Club-smallJ. It would not have helped East to cover. They ducked and South discarded a small heart.

Declarer then turned their attention to the diamond suit and played a diamond to Diamond-small10. West was caught. They won Diamond-smallQ and exited with the third round of trumps to dummy’s Spade-smallJ. A second small diamond to Diamond-smallK followed. That left West with only hearts and Heart-smallA continuation ensured South had 10 tricks.

When in with Diamond-smallQ, West could have cashed Diamond-smallA before exiting though South would then play Diamond-smallK under the ace and have a discard on the fourth round of diamonds to dispose of a second heart.

Had West more diamonds, they could exit in the suit but still leaving Diamond-smallJ9 high in dummy to provide one useful discard.

There was nothing certain about the lie of the East-West honours, though leaving Spade-smallJ in dummy and playing clubs in the above manner seemed a very reasonable and ultimately successful approach. West could equally have held Club-smallQ as Diamond-smallQ though on this day, the ruffing club finesse was the successful approach.

Those few declarers who tried 3NT found no joy especially where East on lead found Heart-small9 at trick 1. This contract should surely be defeated anyway though on that lead was so very quickly.

Richard Solomon

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