DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
This week’s deals have treated end plays: giving an opponent the lead in a position where any lead will help you.
Look at today’s NorthSouth cards. Plan the play at six spades. (North’s bid of four hearts is a “splinter,” showing spade support, heart shortness and slam interest.)
West leads the king of hearts to dummy’s ace. South draws trumps and can rely on a club finesse with the queen. Do you see an extra chance?
Possession of extra trumps can signal a chance for an end play, and South certainly has them here. He should cash the A-K of diamonds and lead his jack of hearts: queen, ruff. South then ruffs dummy’s last diamond. He has “stripped” the diamonds so the defenders can’t lead a diamond safely if they get in. South then leads the nine of hearts.
When West plays low, South discards a club from dummy — a loser on a loser — and when East takes the ten, he is end-played. He must lead a red card, yielding a ruff-sluff, or lead a club from his king. DAILY QUESTION You hold: S Q J 9 7 6 3
H A D 8 6 5 C A Q 6. Your partner opens one diamond, you bid one spade and he raises to three spades. What do you say?
ANSWER: Slam is likely. Partner has a hand worth about 17 points with fourcard support. A minimum such as K 10 5 2, 7 6 5, A
K Q 4 2, K will produce 12 tricks. Cue-bid four clubs. If partner replies with four diamonds, you will cue-bid four hearts. If he has A K
5 2, K 7 6, A K 9 3 2, 7, you may reach a winning grand slam.