Bridge Vested interests
An alligator
wearing a vest is not an investigator. (Neither is an alligator who works for Charles Schwab.) But declarer must often be an investigator; he may need information about one suit to decidehow to play another. In today’s deal, South’s five spades suggested slam interest and controls in both unbid suits. North went on to slam, and West led the queen of diamonds. Declarer took the ace and led the ace of trumps ... and was annoyed when East showed out. South later won heart finesses but lost two trump tricks.
BEST CHANCE
South must launch an investigation.
At Trick Two he lets the queen of hearts ride. If the finesse lost, South would need to pick up the trumps without loss. His best chance would be to cash the ace. When the heart finesse wins, South can afford one trump loser but not two. He can therefore execute a safety play in trumps: He leads a club to his hand and returns a low trump, intending to play the nine from dummy if West follows with the seven.
DAILY QUESTION
You hold: ♠ A 9 5 2 ♥ Q J 7
♦ A K 6 2 ♣ 8 4. Neither side vulnerable. The dealer, at your right, opens one heart. What do you say?
ANSWER:
This is a matter of style and judgment. Some players would double, risking an unwelcome club response. (Their partners always respond in spades or diamonds.) I could accept that action but would pass. I view the hand as oriented for defense, especially with the secondary values in the opening bidder’s suit.
North dealer
N-S vulnerable
The numbers in
the black cells are clues. Numbers above the slash are across clues, numbers below the slash are down clues. The goal is to enter digits 1-9 in the white cells to add up to the number clues. You cannot enter any digit more than once when adding up a clue.
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