The Day

Daily Bridge Club

Back to Birmingham

- By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Occasional­ly I travel to Birmingham, Ala., for dinner and a fun bridge game with old friends and teammates. We always have interestin­g deals.

Cover today’s East/South cards and try to beat 1NT as West. South’s opening bid promised 15 to 17 points. You lead the king of spades: seven, nine, five. When you continue with the ten, East plays the jack, and declarer takes the queen and returns a spade. Your six wins, but East discards a low diamond.

East might have played the jack on the first spade; he wasn’t sure he could spare that card. But what do you lead at Trick Four?

THIRD CLUB

Jim Foster found the good shift to the TEN of clubs: deuce, nine, jack. He won the next spade and led the king and a third club, and East took the eight and ace. West’s ace of hearts scored for down one.

If West exits with a diamond at Trick Four, South can win in dummy and lead a heart to his nine to win seven tricks. Nor can West prevail by shifting to a low club; the suit will be fatally blocked.

DAILY QUESTION

You hold: ♠ Q 5 4 3 2 ♥ K Q 9 ♦ AK4 ♣ J 7. Your partner opens one heart, you respond one spade and he bids two clubs. The opponents pass. What do you say?

ANSWER: You must commit to game. To jump to 3NT might work, but your spade weakness might be a problem. Since you have excellent heart support, a possible ruffing feature in clubs and primary diamond values, bid four hearts. After your one-over-one response, a bid of three hearts would only invite. South dealer N-S vulnerable

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