Gulf News

Curious coincidenc­es continue to occur

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The day after we finished last week’s columns and sent them to the newspapers, I was in London. I saw that the Victoria and Albert Museum had an exhibition dedicated to Pink Floyd. It was excellent, and one song was played from each album, including my favorite,Grantchest­er

Curious coincidenc­es continue to occur. In that last article, I mentioned the Losing Trick Count. In today’sdeal,North-South used it to reach a slightly lucky game. What do you think of the auction? How should the play proceed? At first glance, the North hand looks like a maximum two-spade single raise. But then you note that it has only eight losers (two spades, one heart, two diamonds and three clubs), which makes it worth a three-spade gameinvita­tional limit raise. South started with a seven-loser hand (two spades, one heart, one diamond and three clubs), but the knowledge of at least a 10-card fit permits him to deduct one loser -- hence his nudge to game. West leads the club king. East overtakes with his ace and returns the suit. West cashes a third winner in the suit, on which East discards an encouragin­g diamondnin­e.So,Westshifts to that suit. South needs the spade finesse to win and must avoid a diamond loser. He takes three rounds of hearts to discard his diamond seven. Then declarer runs the spade queen to get home.Finally, note that if East has the king-eight of spades, he should discourage in diamonds. Then if West leads his last club, East can ruff with the spade eight to uppercut declarer’s ace.

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