Chicago Sun-Times

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

- BY FRANK STEWART

Unlucky Louie continues to be my club’s chief proponent of Murphy’s Law. Every day brings a new lament.

“He showed up late for our penny game,” Cy the Cynic told me, “and he said that the traffic congestion will always be directly proportion­al to how late you are.”

Louie was declarer at today’s slam. He took the ace of clubs, drew trumps, cashed the A-K of spades and ruffed his last spade in dummy. Louie then led a diamond to finesse with his queen. West took the king, and Louie lost another diamond at the end.

Good and Bad: “Things are never as good as they are bad,” Louie sighed, quoting Murphy.

After Louie takes the ace of clubs, he can ruff a club, draw trumps with the A-K and ruff a club. He cashes the top spades, ruffs a spade in dummy and returns the jack of clubs. When East shows out, Louie discards a diamond — a loser on a loser. When West takes the queen, he must return a diamond to Louie’s A-Q or concede a fatal ruff-sluff.

This week: end plays.

Daily question

You hold: ♠ J4 ♥ K987 ♦ 532 ♣ A J 5 3. Your partner opens one diamond, you respond one heart, he bids one spade and you try 1NT. Partner then bids two hearts. What do you say?

Answer: Your partner has a strong hand. When he bid a third time despite your non-encouragin­g 1NT, he maintained an interest in game. If he held A 9 6 3, A 6 5,

A Q 7 6, 7 6, he would pass 1NT since he would have no reason to think a heart contract would be better. Jump to 3NT.

South dealer

N-S vulnerable

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