The Mercury News

Aces on Bridge

- Contact Bobby Wolff at bobbywolff@mindspring. com.

Dear Mr. Wolff:

When my partner responds five diamonds to Key-card Blackwood, how do I know whether he is showing one ace or the trump king? If I held two aces, I would need this informatio­n to know whether to bid slam. — Year Dot, Springfiel­d, Mass.

ANSWER: You never want to play slam if you are missing two aces, but missing one ace and the trump king is almost as bad. While the auction can occasional­ly indicate that the finesse is favored to succeed, you will rarely know that for sure. Essentiall­y, the trump king is as good as an ace, and you do not need to differenti­ate. Indeed, even when you have a nine-card fit, possession of the trump queen will often be critical.

Dear Mr. Wolff:

With a hand such as ♠ A-J4, ♥ A-Q-9, ♦ J-9-5, ♣ 108-7-2, is there ever a seat or vulnerabil­ity in which you would pass, as opposed to opening the bidding? When I held this hand vulnerable in second seat, I thought the flat shape and weak long suit superseded the two aces. The traveling score-slip at our duplicate suggested that I was the only one who passed. — Taciturn Tim, Manhattan Beach

ANSWER: Flat 12-counts do not have to be opened — particular­ly when it requires you to bid a bad suit, as here. Doing so may get partner off to the wrong lead if you end up on defense. With two four-card suits or a five-carder, I would almost never pass, however.

Dear Mr. Wolff:

Suppose you are 5-5 in a major and a minor and hear your right-hand opponent open the minor, which could be two cards. Is it best to wait for one round, perhaps hoping to hear partner balance with a takeout double? Or is it better to ignore the minor and bid the major? — Still Waiting, Albuquerqu­e, N.M.

ANSWER: When you have length in your right-hand opponent’s bid minor, whether the opening guarantees length or not, you should overcall. You may never get a second chance if you do not act at once. With any luck, you may get a chance to bid the second suit at your next turn if you haven’t already found a fit.

Dear Mr. Wolff:

In fourth chair, you are dealt ♠ A-10-8-2, ♥ J-9-4, ♦ K-J7-6, ♣ Q-10, and you hear a weak two spades on your left, double by partner and three spades on your right. You bid three no-trump, over which partner bids four hearts. Should you bid on? — Pre-empts Work, Charleston, S.C.

ANSWER: While you have a decent hand, you implied opening values when you contracted for game. You are close to cue-bidding four spades, but I’d pass, primarily because with anything like a slam-drive, partner might have done more himself. I’d expect him to have at least five hearts and a spade void, but not necessaril­y a great hand.

Dear Mr. Wolff:

Recently, I held ♠ A-J-7-43, ♥ 6-4, ♦ K-Q, ♣ J-10-87. I responded one spade to partner’s one-club opening, and my partner now jumped to four spades. What should I expect, and what should I do next? — Lots in Reserve, Newport News, Va.

ANSWER: A jump to four spades suggests a relatively balanced hand with more than a strong no-trump. (Partner could make a splinter raise to four hearts or four diamonds, or could jump to four clubs to show a 6-4hand type.) Your hand has real slam potential, but I’m not sure it is worth more than a cue-bid of five diamonds and reverting to five spades over a five-heart response.

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