Deccan Chronicle

BRIDGE | Susanna Gross

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Ihave not played a single hand of bridge for about a month, neither have I kibitzed online. Ergo I have no bridge stories to tell and no players to tell them about. However, I have been reading a bit and one of my favourite bridge books is Geir Helgemo’s Bridge With Imaginatio­n. In most of the featured hands he finds some magical stardust to sprinkle over the cards, bamboozlin­g the opps with his brilliance. Unusually, today’s hand, from the 2000 Bermuda Bowl round robin, features his teammates, fellow Norwegians Boye Brogeland and Erik Saelensmin­de (aka Silla) see diagram.

West led a low heart which South (Silla) won with the queen. He continued with K which West had to duck, o therw ise Declarer makes five spades, three hearts and A; now he could only count eight. The club finesse was unlikely to work after East’s weaktwo opening and he could not afford to give up a club because the defenders would have five tricks to take. South’s next move was imaginativ­e — he played a diamond to the queen! Why? He wanted to break the communicat­ion between the two defenders. East had no answer. If he cashed his three diamond winners Declarer’s 10 would be good for a ninth trick and if he switches to a club, after cashing fewer than three diamonds, he can’t enjoy his winning diamonds. Declarer would simply run the club switch to dummy’s Jack. Back to the lead: understand­able, but unfortunat­ely it gave the contract. If West starts with his singleton diamond, East can cash three diamonds and switch to a club. A spade lead beats it too as West can win the first heart (blocking the hearts) and return a second spade.

What would you have led?

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