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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

For keen Junior, Intermediate and other players: It’s Fri yay 2.png Day.

Time for a change?

Some interesting defending for you to do today. It is not always right to return partner’s opening lead…or is it!laughing

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North Deals
None Vul

Spade-small

5 3

Heart-small

K Q J 10 7 4

Diamond-small

J 9 6

Club-small

5 3

   

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

Q 9

Heart-small

A 9 5

Diamond-small

A 7 4 2

Club-small

Q J 8 7

 

West

North

East

South

 

dummy

you

 

 

2 Heart-small

Pass

4 Spade-small

All pass

 

 

 

A very quick bidding sequence by your opponents. 2Heart-small was a standard Weak 2 while 4Spade-small said South wanted their suit to be trumps. Your partner led Diamond-small8 (4th highest from an honour, 2nd highest from 3 or 4 small). Are you going to win trick 1 and if so and declarer plays Diamond-smallQ, what do you play to trick 2? Teams is the game.

We can conclude South has lots, probably at least 7, spades and probably, though not for certain, not many hearts. There will be some days when South has Diamond-smallKQx and is trying to forge an entry to dummy by playing a high honour under your ace. However, taken at face value, South is shortish in diamonds.

We know our partner has very few high card points. They could hold Club-smallA in which case an immediate switch to Club-smallQ should beat the contract. However, there is no rush as you hold the very important Heart-smallA. 

If South has Club-smallAK, then they can quickly get to dummy by ruffing a club. Suppose then, that is not the case.

It is probably a wait and see game…but rather than just return a diamond, safe but not very constructive, why not play a trump, Spade-small9? You are very unlikely to win a trump trick here.

South wins Spade-smallA (Spade-small8 from partner), plays Diamond-smallQ and out comes Heart-small8 from declarer. Your method is when following suit to play “high then low” with an odd number of cards in the suit. Your partner plays Heart-small6 and Heart-small10 comes from dummy. Do you win this trick?

Too right you do and then continue your plan by playing Spade-smallQ.

North Deals
None Vul

Spade-small

5 3

Heart-small

K Q J 10 7 4

Diamond-small

J 9 6

Club-small

5 3

Spade-small

J 8

Heart-small

6 3 2

Diamond-small

10 8 5 3

Club-small

K 10 9 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

Spade-small

Q 9

Heart-small

A 9 5

Diamond-small

A 7 4 2

Club-small

Q J 8 7

 

Spade-small

A K 10 7 6 4 2

Heart-small

8

Diamond-small

K Q

Club-small

A 6 4

Heart-small

 

West

North

East

South

       

 

2 Heart-small

Pass

4 Spade-small

All pass

 

 

 

Heart-small6 told you that West had 1 or 3 hearts. Surely it was 3 because your partner may well have led a singleton at trick 1 and also because it was unlikely South had length in hearts. Giving count in such situations is so important. West has little to do on this deal except tell you, assuming you hold Heart-smallA, when it is correct to take the ace.

Had you not switched to a trump at trick 2, declarer could ruff a losing club in dummy and with a fortunate trump break, just lose one trick in each side suit.

That was why switching to Club-smallQ at trick 2 was not right. It might be but you did not have to do so straightaway.

Note that South was wrong to choose spades as trumps. Had they played “Ogust”, a convention which with 2NT asks opener whether they had a good or poor Weak 2 and what their trump suit was like, they would have discovered the hand was poor but the trump suit was good. 4Heart-small is a fairly easy make for the loss of two red aces and a club. However, most declarers played 4Spade-small and the majority made their game, even after a diamond lead. 

Keep your options open

keep options open.jpg

Nothing was certain when Diamond-smallA took trick 1 but a trump switch covered more possibilities than either switching to a club or continuing diamonds.

Richard Solomon

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