The Mercury News Weekend

BRIDGE

- Frank Stewart

Friday, August 26

“I’ve made certain mistakes so many times,” a player at the club told me, “that I don’t refer to them as mistakes any more. I call them ‘traditions.’”

Certain types of mistakes are common: playing too fast, failing to count, missing easy inferences, overusing convention­s. Against today’s four hearts, West led the ace and another club, and South won and drew trumps. He ruffed dummy’s last club, cashed the A-K of spades and exited with a spade. South hoped West would win, but when East won with the nine and shifted to a diamond, South lost two diamonds and went down. What mistake did South make? A frequent error in dummy play is the failure to play a loser on a loser. After South draws trumps, he can take the K-A of spades and lead dummy’s eight of clubs. When East discards, South discards his spade loser.

West wins but, as it happens, he has no more spades. He must lead a diamond, letting South’s king score, or lead another club, conceding a ruff-sluff.

DAILY QUESTION:

You hold: ♠ J7 ♥ 5 ◆ AQ85 ♣A J 10 7 5 3. You open one club, your partner responds one spade, you rebid two clubs and he tries 2NT. What do you say?

ANSWER: Partner’s 2NT invites game, but since your values are minimum, you can’t accept. Your rebid of two clubs suggested a six-card suit; neverthele­ss, rebid three clubs. Notrump doesn’t look right. It’s possible that you have a better contract at diamonds, but you can’t look for it.

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