DAILY BRIDGE CLUB:
“Because there aren’t any fours.” — NBA player Antoine Walker, asked why he took so many threepoint shots.
Some bridge players would rather miss from three-point range than score on an uncontested layup. When today’s South scraped up a two-spade bid, North roared into seven even though South might have a trump or heart loser.
West led a heart, and South won, cashed the ace of diamonds, led a trump to his hand, ruffed a diamond, ruffed a heart high and ruffed his last diamond. He drew trumps and took dummy’s high clubs, but when East turned up J-10-94, declarer had a club loser.
“Avoid speculative grand slams,” South advised his partner.
I agree, but I can’t fault North here. South makes seven spades on a dummy reversal. The play: ace of hearts, heart ruff high, club to dummy’s ace, heart ruff high, trump to dummy, heart ruff, ace of diamonds, heart ruff. South can then ruff a diamond and win the rest with the J-10 of trumps and K-Q of clubs.
DAILY QUESTION: You hold: ♠ J1093 ♥ AJ873 ◆ A ♣ A K Q. Your partner opens one diamond. The next player passes. What do you say?
ANSWER: Though you have 19 points plus a fivecard suit and will probably end at slam, the best strain is uncertain: You may belong at any of the four suits or at notrump. Bid one heart. A jump-shift should show a self-sufficient suit, excellent support for partner’s suit or a strong balanced hand.