Montreal Gazette

ACES ON BRIDGE

- BOBBY WOLFF

“Tricks and treachery are the practices of fools that have not wit enough to be honest.” — Benjamin Franklin It is often a danger signal when an expert thrusts a bridge deal scrawled illegibly on a grubby scrap of paper into your hand. Typically, he is giving you a chance to make a fool of yourself, so make sure not to commit to a plan until you have found the trap. In the deal that follows, a colleague of mine described being buttonhole­d by an internatio­nal player and shown just the North and South cards, to play four spades on the bidding and auction shown. My friend thought he had spotted the theme. He ruffed the opening lead high, then played a spade to dummy’s 10 for another diamond ruff. He went back to dummy with a trump to ruff the last diamond and led a third trump to dummy, then a low club from the board, intending to insert the nine. When East inserted the 10, the king lost to the ace. The defenders cashed three clubs ending in West, and exited in hearts, leaving declarer needing one of the queen or 10 onside. Today was not his lucky day. That said, though declarer had taken most of his chances, he could have done better. At trick one, declarer simply discards a heart on the diamond king. West’s best hope is to shift to a trump, but you win, eliminate the hearts, then return to dummy in trump to ruff the diamond nine. Finally, you go back to dummy with a trump and play the diamond queen, throwing a club from hand. West is forced either to furnish a ruff-anddiscard or to lead around to your club king. ANSWER: Time to stand up and be counted: Are you going to rebid two no-trump without a stopper or rebid diamonds (strongly suggesting six, or five with better suit intermedia­tes than this)? I’ll go for two no-trump; yes, this may wrong-side no-trump, but it may also be the best way to get to three no-trump when it is the only game we can make.

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