The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB:
Many pairs treat a 2NT response to a major-suit opening bid as an artificial forcing raise, so today’s North had to temporize with a two-club response.
South’s leap to six spades was speculative, but he found the right cards in dummy and handled the play well. He took the ace of diamonds and set out to get a count of the defenders’ distribution: He ruffed a diamond, led a trump to dummy, ruffed a diamond and drew trumps with the ace and jack.
Declarer next let the queen of hearts ride. West won and returned a heart, and South took the jack and ace.
When East discarded, declarer had the information he needed. He knew West had held three spades, five hearts and at least four diamonds (West had obligingly kept his queen), so one club at most. So South led a club to the king and confidently returned a club to his 10.
“Counting the hand” is a simple process. It takes focus and practice, but anyone can do it.
DAILY QUESTION: You hold: QJ7 Q103 A 107 K J 9 4. Your partner opens one diamond. The next player passes. What do you say?
ANSWER: Over a minorsuit opening bid, most pairs treat a 2NT response as natural and game-forcing. If that is your agreement, bid 2NT. Some pairs use the bid as invitational, showing about 11 points. I dislike that treatment and avoid it because a continuation of the auction is often undefined and awkward.