The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

RUNNING TO THE BRIDGE TABLE

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Michel de Montaigne, who was a 16th-century essayist and philosophe­r, wrote, “When I am attacked by gloomy thoughts, nothing helps me so much as running to my books.”

For a bridge player, nothing helps so much as turning to a deck of cards. But you need to think clearly to play well. Just pulling the card nearest your thumb will rarely work.

This deal was declared thoughtful­ly by Ilana Barness from Israel. How did she plan to make four spades after a club lead? What was West’s more effective opening salvo?

That South hand had only four high-card points, but it included two five-card majors and a void. Barness realized that if she could find a good fit with her partner, she would win a lot of tricks.

Declarer knew that when you have a two-suited hand, you should play on the side suit first. So, after discarding a diamond on dummy’s club king, Barness continued with the ace and another heart. East returned a club, declarer pitching a second diamond. Now came the spade king, East dropping the jack. Barness knew that this was more likely to be a singleton than from the doubleton queen-jack. So she abandoned trumps. Instead, she cashed dummy’s diamond ace, ruffed a club, ruffed a heart, ruffed a club and ruffed a heart. There were three cards left, West having only trumps. Declarer led a diamond from the dummy and discarded her winning heart 10. West ruffed but had to lead away from her spade queen-nine into declarer’s ace-10.

The only winning opening lead was the diamond king, but how could West have found that?

By Steve Moore

 ??  ?? CLOSE TO HOME: By John McPherson
IN THE BLEACHERS:
CLOSE TO HOME: By John McPherson IN THE BLEACHERS:
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By Phillip Alder
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 ??  ?? POOCH CAFE: By Paul Gilligan
POOCH CAFE: By Paul Gilligan

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