Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ACES ON BRIDGE

- BOBBY WOLFF bobbywolff@mindspring.com

When you have nothing to say, say nothing. — Charles Caleb Colton

After East’s club raise, South might have inferred that North had doubled with long spades; thus, introducin­g the hearts might be risky despite his promising shape. North did well not to look for a slam but simply to bid four spades. East, however, was not finished and came again with five clubs. North could have been forgiven for repeating his suit, but he intelligen­tly offered hearts as a possible strain. South had an easy pass now.

Against five hearts, West kicked off with the club king. Upon getting an odd count signal from East, he wisely shifted to a diamond, attacking the late entry to dummy’s spades. This in itself might have tipped declarer off as to the bad spade split, but there was more informatio­n to come. Unwilling to lose his entry to hand, declarer played the heart jack from dummy. East won the king and continued the accurate defense when he tapped the table with a diamond. South now cashed the heart ace and ruffed a club to hand to pull the final trump.

Most players would blithely charge in with the top spades at this point, but this South mentally constructe­d the unseen hands. Clubs appeared to be 5-5; would East, holding 2=3=3=5 shape, really take a solo venture at the five-level with such a balanced hand? That seemed unlikely on all counts, so declarer pegged him for a singleton spade and bravely finessed the spade 10 for the contract.

Note that even four spades easily could have gone down!

ANSWER: Starting with a double gets your power across at the risk of distorting your hand. A more sensible option might be to have the agreement that you can bid four clubs here. If (and only if!) you have a firm agreement that this tool is available, the cue-bid should show one major in a hand like this one. Partner will work out which suit you have, and may then be able to judge the fit and level better than you.

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

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