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Play and Defend Better: for improving players
Good Planning, Good Luck, Good Result
The opposite is often true. A faulty line brings its deserved reward in failure. So, sometimes, sensible play will bring a little piece of good fortune and a good result. Keeping an eye on losers when playing in a suit contract is a great idea.
South Deals None Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
2 ♠ | |||
Pass | 2 NT | Pass | 3 ♠ |
Pass | 4 ♠ | All pass |
2 was a weak 2 with partner enquiring as to your strength and suit quality. 3
showed top of the range for point count and good suit quality (well, it’s kind of "good". I am sure you have had much worse for a weak 2 opening!). Very soon, you were trying to make 10 tricks on the
10 lead.
Losers were a bit hard to estimate. It looks like on most normal days you will lose one trick in each suit except diamonds. You may not lose a trump though there is always the chance (even such a good guesser like you are!) of finding two club losers.
Thus, winning the A to play a trump seems a fair start…but which trump? Any will work if East has Kx though the low spade is preferable if East were to produce singleton king. However, when you play a low spade, definitely best on the actual lie, East discards a low diamond. Now you must be careful not to lose two trump tricks. So, insert the
J and West will take their king to continue with
5. You are in hand and have to take a finesse of the
10 on which East discards
K. What’s going on?
You have not seen 9 but there is no guarantee that West holds it. While not guaranteed, they may have played that card if they had a sequence. Furthermore, that
K seems to indicate where all the missing high hearts are. If you play a third trump now, you will be stuck in dummy and that may not be a great idea.
So, it’s time to face the inevitable. You have to play clubs at some point and while there is a danger of misguessing, it could and would be worse if you played a third trump to dummy’s Q at this point.
So, a club it is….and West plays 2…. and you?
Well, you will be delighted to know that you cannot misguess! Indeed, there was a little clue you can draw from East’s discard. With a spade void, all the missing heart honours and A, you might just have got a call from East. So, play West for the ace…but they had the queen as well.
South Deals None Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
2 ♠ | |||
Pass | 2 NT | Pass | 3 ♠ |
Pass | 4 ♠ | All pass |
As you can see, you really did not want East to get the lead as a third diamond would have provided a second trump trick for West. So, probably play K. However, you are not quite home yet. Your
K scores after which you can play
Q. However, that dangerous
10 was still at large and you needed a way back to hand to draw it. So, hoping that West does have the
Q, you must exit
J not
7.
J forces the queen with a club ruff enabling you to get back to your hand (West had switched to a heart.) and draw the that annoying
10 under your ace.
As predicted, a spade, a heart and a club loser. However, not all plain sailing with a little slice of good fortune needed along the way.
Richard Solomon
Note that had West led a heart initially or switched to a heart when in with the K, it was imperative for declarer to duck the first round of the suit or else that
10 would have defeated the contract.
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