Albuquerque Journal

ACES ON BRIDGE

- Bobby Wolff If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, e-mail him at bobbywolff@mindspring.com. Copyright 2023, Distribute­d by Universal Uclick for UFS

Dear Mr. Wolff:Is it ethical to draw inferences from opponents’ mannerisms? — Legal Eagle, Rockford, Ill. ANSWER: It is, but not if you have induced such mannerisms. There is a fine line between the ethical and the unethical in these circumstan­ces, and in any case, you must be prepared to accept your bad board if the inference you draw is incorrect — unless, of course, you felt that your opponent was deliberate­ly misleading you.

Dear Mr. Wolff:My partner and I play fourth-suit forcing to game. I contend that it should be forcing to game in a major only, not to a minor-suit game, and that we should write “usually forcing to game” on the convention card. My partner says it should be forcing to game for a minor suit as well. Who is right? — Janitor, Madison, Wis.

ANSWER: Unless by partnershi­p agreement, there is no reason to differenti­ate one set of sequences from the other. (The biggest problems for fourth-suit game-forcing comes when responder, with invitation­al values, has no real fit for partner in either of his suits and cannot rebid his suit in an invitation­al way. This is as likely to happen over a minor as a major.)

Dear Mr. Wolff:How would you open the bidding with this hand: SPADES K-Q-J-6-5-3-2, HEARTS —, DIAMONDS A-K-10-4, CLUBS 6-3, non-vulnerable against vulnerable opponents?

— Slam Potential, Seneca, S.C.

ANSWER: I’d start with one spade. A preemptive four spades has a lot of appeal, but the colors also mean I would open four spades with king-queen-jacksevent­h of spades and not much more. If it is does happen to be our hand, jumping the gun could make any slam-bidding decision very difficult for my partner. Make the diamond ace the jack, and I might go the other way.

Dear Mr. Wolff:How important would you say a strong team spirit is when performing well in major events?

— Team Huddle, Selma, Ala.

ANSWER: People often underestim­ate the effect of state of mind on one’s bridge game. The more confident and “in the zone” a player feels, the better he will play. Having supportive teammates can provide that all-important morale boost. My old friend Seymon Deutsch’s team always outperform­ed the sum of their parts because of this.

Dear Mr. Wolff:I have noticed that some of the better players at my club interfere very aggressive­ly against two-club openings. Is this not very dangerous, or am I missing something?

— Ill-defined, Casper, Wyo. ANSWER: A two-club opening is undefined: The opening bidder is often relying on being able to show what he has at his next turn. If you can jam the auction so that opener cannot convenient­ly describe his hand to his partner, they are more likely to misjudge, perhaps by underbiddi­ng, overbiddin­g, playing the wrong strain or even doubling you prematurel­y. So consider making a call when you have a six-card suit or a twosuited hand at favorable vulnerabil­ity. Bear in mind that jumping to the threelevel is likely to be more effective than a two-level overcall.

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