Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ACES ON BRIDGE

- BOBBY WOLFF

West was asleep at the wheel on today’s deal, in which South landed in four spades after his partner’s pre-emptive raise. It is unusual to make such a bid with three kings, but North felt he had to drive to game and had no other way to do so without overstatin­g his high cards.

The lead of the diamond queen went to the ace, and East, unwilling to open up the hearts, returned a diamond. Declarer could see that he would need to resort to a swindle. He won and, since a heart would give the defenders too many chances to play that suit, immediatel­y led a deceptive club jack to the king and East’s ace. Back came another club to South’s queen, and now declarer advanced the heart 10.

After West played small, not wanting to save South a guess if he had the jack10, declarer went up with the king. He then drew trumps in two rounds, cashed the club nine and put West in with the heart ace to generate the critical ruff-and-discard.

Declarer had done well to play a heart to put

West to the test at a moment when he did not yet know much about the hand, but West should not have fallen for it. He needed his partner to have the heart queen, but when there is a decision between making a legitimate play and one that requires an incorrect guess on an opponent’s part, one should opt for the legitimate line. Had West acknowledg­ed this, he would have gone up with the heart ace, escaping the endplay and ensuring a second heart trick for the defense.

 ?? — William Cowper ?? ‘Tis hard if all is false that I advance, A fool must now and then be right by chance.
— William Cowper ‘Tis hard if all is false that I advance, A fool must now and then be right by chance.
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