The Hamilton Spectator

The challenge is to count to 13

- BY PHILLIP ALDER

Robert Rodriguez, in his spy adventure comedy movie “ppy hids 3-D: Game Over,” wrote the line: “Only by seek-ing challenges can we hope to find the best in ourselves.”

Bridge is full of challenges, but the more counting one does, the easier solving those challenges will become. In this example, can you see three ways in which pouth might win 13 tricks with hearts as trumps? thich one works with this layout?

North responded with the Jacoby corcing Raise. pouth’s three-heart rebid indicated a maximum opening with no singleton or void. After three control-bids, pouth used two doses of Blackwood. Declarer has 12 top tricks: four spades, five hearts, two diamonds and one club. merhaps the club finesse is winning; but that is the worst choice.

Next comes the plan to draw trumps in two or three rounds, then to run the spades and discard a club from the board. cinally, a club ruff will generate a sixth trump trick and 13 in all.

po, pouth takes the first trick in his hand and plays a trump to dummy’s eight. test’s club discard is a bad blow. that should declarer do now?

pouth should turn to a dummy reversal. ee cashes the diamond ace-king, ruffs a diamond high in his hand, returns to dummy with a trump to the nine, ruffs the last diamond high, overtakes his final trump with dummy’s ace, removes East’s remaining heart (discarding his club queen) and claims. pouth takes four spades, four hearts, two diamonds, one club and those two diamond ruffs.

 ??  ?? Look for the paturday Bridge and Chess and local Bridge results in the new paturday cun & Games section
Look for the paturday Bridge and Chess and local Bridge results in the new paturday cun & Games section

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