Chicago Sun-Times

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

- BY FRANK STEWART

“Wendy is telling everybody that I’m a few tacos short of a combinatio­n plate when I’m declarer,” Cy the Cynic told me in the club lounge. Cy, a chauvinist, and Wendy, our feminist, are always at odds.

“She’s saying your dummy play is weak?”

“It’s shameful,” Cy growled. “But two can play that game. Let me show you a deal from our penny game.”

It seemed that Wendy had played at four hearts. She won West’s trump lead in dummy and tried a club to her queen. West won and shifted to a diamond: three, king, eight.

“Wendy won the club return,” Cy told me, “drew trumps and let the jack of diamonds ride. East took the queen and cashed the ace of spades. Down one. Wendy blew it and should be held publicly accountabl­e.”

I wish Cy and Wendy would make peace, but Wendy could have made four hearts. After she draws trumps, she leads a spade to her king. She next takes the A- J of clubs, pitching a spade from dummy, and exits with a spade. When East wins, he is end- played. DAILY QUESTION You hold: partner opens one heart, you respond one spade and he bids two diamonds. What do you say?

ANSWER: This is a brutal problem in “Standard” methods, where opener’s minimum change of suit covers a wide range of hands. Your part ! ! " # $ $ % be timid. Raise to three diamonds, though you would rather have a fourth diamond. West dealer N- S vulnerable

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