All News
Play and Defend Better: for improving players
Patience and Prayer: The Day of the Jack (all!).
It’s time to defend a hand. It’s one of those 3NT contracts where it looks like you are on your own. You have an 11 count, declarer a 10+ overcall and dummy an ominous 14. Partner could have a useful card but you seem to have most of the defence’s assets. Here you are as East:
AJT72
T8
A4
Q963
and the bidding as gone:
West North East South
1 2
Pass 2 Pass 2NT
Pass 3NT All Pass
Partner leads 3, either a singleton or a three or four card holding in your suit which they have not previously shown. This is what you see in dummy:
East Deals None Vul |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
West | North | East | South |
dummy | you | ||
1 ♠ | 2 ♦ | ||
Pass | 2 ♠ | Pass | 2 NT |
Pass | 3 NT | All pass |
Declarer plays low from dummy at trick 1…and you have your first decision. If partner has four small spades, then you should play A to drop the singleton K. However, if declarer has doubleton K, you have just given the declarer a bonus second spade trick.
Many players would not bid 2NT after 2 with just singleton king. Also, had your partner held 4 little spades, they had the option of bidding a pre-emptive 3. So, the odds seem to favour inserting 10 and hope you can slowly beat the contract.
K wins and South plays four winning hearts (they had KJ73) with dummy then you throwing a club. You have to cling on to 4 potentially winning spades for as long as you can. Next comes a small diamond to dummy’s king and your ace. There is nothing to be gained now from playing a black suit. So, play back a diamond.
Declarer’s queen wins the trick with partner following low…no jack…and presumably declarer does not hold it as the next card he plays is the A followed by a club to the king.
Are you still awake? Do you still want to beat the contract? What’s your plan? (Your partner follows with two low clubs.)
Your last 6 cards, when A is played, are : AJ72 Q96
You can rest assured that if you follow with two low clubs that declarer will play a third round of clubs. Your queen wins but you have to give declarer a second spade trick (2 spades, 4 hearts, 1 diamond and 2 clubs… game!).
So, on the second round of clubs, tell the declarer (quietly!) that you are not going to be end-played! Throw the Q. Hopefully, you did.
East Deals None Vul |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
West | North | East | South |
1 ♠ | 2 ♦ | ||
Pass | 2 ♠ | Pass | 2 NT |
Pass | 3 NT | All pass |
Playing your partner for the J was actually not that unlikely. From the bidding, declarer has 5 diamonds and from the play, 4 hearts, at least 1 spade and 2 clubs. Unless that K was a singleton (you cannot get every defence right), there is no room for any more clubs in declarer’s hand….and had they held J, they would probably finesse hoping you did not have Q or that it was doubleton.
So, after the unblock, out came a third club to partner’s J..then J and you took the last two tricks with your AJ. Nothing flashy…until the time for the unblock came. Hopefully, you were there.
Yes, South could have made their contract by playing 10 and running that card to your ace. That was not your problem here. Patience and eventually taking the hopeful but likely chance that your partner was dealt both minor suit jacks. Whoever said jacks were not important cards! Every jack scored a trick on this deal.
Richard Solomon