Edmonton Journal

Aces on bridge

- Bobby wolff

“That best portion of a good man’s life,

His little, nameless, unremember­ed acts Of kindness and love.” — William Wordsworth

Our final example in the theme of negotiatin­g a suit missing the queen and jack will happen to you once!

In the finals of the World Championsh­ips in Beijing in 1995, neither the men nor women managed to stop low — indeed, three pairs bid the hands to game, and no one made much of an attempt to make it. When South declares the hand on a diamond lead, the contract is unbreakabl­e. South can play for a mundane doubleton queen-jack of trumps.

In four hearts, there is no need to rush things; but it is simplest to finesse the diamond jack at trick one, then play a club. East must take his ace, and a diamond return is as good as any. South wins the ace, plays a spade to the king, then leads the diamond king for a spade discard; now the carding makes it safe to ruff a diamond. Next cash the club king, pitching a spade, ruff a club and exit with a spade from dummy. In the fivecard ending, either defender can take this trick, but it is best for West to overtake East’s queen with the ace and cash his side’s second spade trick.

However, declarer is now left with A-9-4 in trumps facing K-10-6, and the defense’s trump trick is about to vanish. When West leads a club, you ruff low in dummy, and whether East ruffs in with the eight or queen, you are home free. A perfect Devil’s coup.

ANSWER: There is as yet no official Wolff’s Law. I have laid down the law in so many areas it would be hard to define just one. Among the conclusion­s I have come to in a long life at the table is that 4-4-4-1 hands play disappoint­ingly on offense, but always play nicely on defense. Stretching to open three-suited hands is a fine way to turn a plus score into a minus; this hand is a solid pass, not a light opening bid.

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