Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ACES ON BRIDGE

- BOBBY WOLFF If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, email him at

DEAR MR. WOLFF: Recently, I held ♠ 10-2,

♥ A-Q-J-3-2, ♦ K-4, ♣ A-Q3-2, and because I was worried about protecting my diamond king, I was tempted to open one no-trump rather than risking a one-heart call and hearing a response of one no-trump. What do you think about the general principle here?

— Melting Moments,

Taos, N.M. DEAR READER: I would never open one notrump with a 5-4 pattern that includes a chunky fivecard major, and would think it a major distortion of my hand to do so. Note that unprotecti­ng your small doubleton spade is just as inelegant as protecting your doubleton king — which may not need protecting at all. A 5-4 pattern with a major is not a balanced hand, especially this hand.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: I managed to pull two cards out of my hand simultaneo­usly in the same suit, and the tournament director explained that this was only a minor penalty card, not a major penalty card. This is a new one on me, so I hope you will explain how the rules work.

— Bumble Bee,

Newark, N.J. DEAR READER: When two cards are played simultaneo­usly or a card is dropped, and the exposed card is not an honor, you trigger the minor penalty-card rules. In such instances, the player must play the exposed card before any other non-honor card of the same suit. So you could play or discard the heart jack, but not the heart three, before (say) an exposed heart seven.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: If your agreed style is to bid majors before diamonds in response to one club, what happens if you hold a 4-6 shape with clubs and a major, and you open one club and hear a one-diamond response? Should you bid the major or does it depend on suit quality?

— Overpass, Corpus Christi, Texas DEAR READER: As opener, I would bid my major rather than repeat my clubs, almost no matter how weak the major and how strong my clubs. An exception might be to bypass an honorless major in favor of repeating a good six-card club suit. But even then, you might lose your 4-4 fit.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: Do you have any simple rules as to what sort of hand passes over an opening bid, then comes into a live auction (i.e., not in the balancing seat) at his next turn? I’m contrastin­g what it means to pass then double after hearing one club to your right, one heart to your left and two clubs to your right. — Stepping Stone,

Greenville, S.C. DEAR READER: Passing then reopening in the balancing seat conveys no special message, as you said. But backing into a live auction — as in the sequence quoted — when responder could still have a good hand, guarantees length in opener’s first-bid suit. Since you must have a good hand to act, you should have length in opener’s suit, or you would already have bid. Typically, you would be close to 4-1-4-4 with opening values.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: When you open one club and raise partner’s one spade to two spades, with ♠ A-Q-3-2, ♥ Q-5-3, ♦ K-10, ♣ J-9-4-2, how would you bid on over a call of three diamonds from your partner? — Lumpfish, Wausau, Wis. DEAR READER: A simple raise to four spades looks right. You have a minimum, but if partner has length in diamonds, your holding looks ideal. Switch your red suits, and you should sign off in three spades since honor-third is not a great holding if partner needs help. By contrast, honor-doubleton lets your partner ruff the suit in your hand.

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