Daily Bridge Club
More from Birmingham Thursday, October 24, 2019
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
Here’s another deal from my monthly game in Birmingham with old friends. Yesterday I reported a deal in which they mangled me. Today’s deal gave me a chance to recover.
Cover the West/South cards and see if you defend as I did. Against three spades, West led the seven of diamonds: eight, jack from me, nine. How should I continue?
I placed South with seven spades and clearly the 10-9 of diamonds. Moreover, my partner would have led a singleton heart, so South had one or two. I assumed that South had 7-2-2-2 pattern and West something in trumps.
CLUB LOSER
If I led the ace and a third diamond, South would pitch his club loser. So at Trick Two I shifted to the king of clubs.
South took dummy’s ace and (at double dummy) could have gone down one by attacking the hearts. Instead, he led the ten of spades. I won, led a club to West, won the diamond return with the queen and led the ace. South ruffed with the jack, but West discarded, and his Q-8-4 were worth two tricks. Down two.
DAILY QUESTION
dealer. When I held this hand in today’s deal, I opened one heart. Do you agree?
ANSWER: The textbook advice with two five-card suits is to open in the higher-ranking suit regardless of quality. To open one diamond would risk losing a trump fit in hearts. In third seat, or in an extreme case such as A 4, 3, 7 6 5 4 3, A K Q J 3, you might make an exception and treat the weaker suit as a four-carder. East dealer Both sides vulnerable