Cape Argus

FRANK STEWART BRIDGE

-

CY’S TOLERANCE LEVEL “Still trying to get a date with Wendy?” I asked Cy the Cynic in the club lounge. “She won’t go,” Cy said. “She has an infinite supply of excuses.”

“She’s playing hard to get,” I suggested. “She’s also playing hard to tolerate,” Cy growled.

Cy and Wendy were today’s East-West in a penny game. Against four spades, Wendy led the ace and a low heart. South won and led a trump (not best), and Wendy took her ace and led a third heart. Fifth Club

“I ruffed dummy’s queen,” the Cynic said. “South overruffed, took the A-K of clubs and ruffed a club. I overruffed with my king, but South took the rest: He could ruff another club in dummy to set up his fifth club. Wendy told me I probably failed block-building in kindergart­en.”

Cy erred. On the third heart, he must discard a club instead of ruffing. If South leads a second trump, Cy can win and lead a third trump, and South loses a club. Nor can South start the clubs without drawing trumps: Then Cy gets a ruff with last low trump. Daily Question

You hold: ♠ A ♥ A 9 7 6 5 4 ♦ K J ♣ Q 10 8 2. Your partner opens one diamond, you respond one heart, he bids one spade and you try two clubs. Partner then rebids two diamonds. What do you say?

Answer: Your partner’s strength is unclear, but he will usually have six diamonds and four spades. (True, some players might hold K Q 7 6, 8 3, A Q 10 7 6, J 6; others would bid 2NT over two clubs with that hand.) Bid two hearts, which partner should treat as forcing. South dealer

Both sides vulnerable

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa