LIFE & CULTURE
“Simple Saturday” columns are meant to help aspiring players improve technique and develop logical thinking.
When I visited the Birmingham (Ala.) Duplicate Bridge Club, a player asked about my thought process as declarer when dummy appears. I begin by counting winners — maybe losers — and consider how I can develop extra winners or avoid losers.
Then I go on to consider technical aspects of the play: preserving entries, perhaps. Next I visualize how the defenders’ cards may lie. Declarers have much to think about.
At today’s slam, South must not finesse on the first club; he can count 12 tricks. He takes the ace and cashes the ace of trumps. Next he takes the A-K of diamonds, pitching a club from dummy, and the A-K of hearts. He wins the next five tricks by crossruffing, and dummy still has a high trump to fulfill the slam.
South succeeds if he counts winners and forms a plan. If he finesses in clubs at Trick One or takes the ace and draws some trumps, he fails.
Daily Question: You hold: & KJ94 h 3 ( AK94 $ Q J 6 3. The dealer, at your right, opens one diamond. You pass, the next player responds one heart and the opening bidder raises to two hearts. What do you say?
Answer: You couldn’t act over one diamond. (A few experts would try one spade; that wouldn’t occur to me.) Since you have a sound hand with length in the unbid suits, double for takeout now. You would also double if the opening bidder’s second bid was 1NT. by Dana Summers