Chicago Sun-Times

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

- BY FRANK STEWART

A light in my club’s main card room had burned out, and Unlucky Louie was drafted to replace it. He dropped the replacemen­t bulb, and it shattered to pieces.

“You know what that means,” Cy the Cynic observed : “seven years of bad ideas.”

In a penny game, Louie was declarer at today’s 3NT. North took a rosy view when he raised to game. West led a spade, and dummy’s ten won. Louie next led the ten of clubs, and East rose with the ace to return a spade.

Louie took the ace and cashed three clubs, but when he next led a diamond from dummy to his jack, West won and cashed three spades. Down one.

“It wasn’t a good idea to overbid,” Louie told North.

I suppose it wasn’t, with Louie as declarer. At Trick Two he must lead a diamond to his jack. West wins but can’t lead another spade effectivel­y.

If West shifts to a heart, Louie wins and forces out the ace of clubs. He wins East’s spade return, runs the clubs and finesses in diamonds again to win nine tricks. DAILY QUESTION

You hold: opens one heart, and the next player overcalls one spade. What do you say?

ANSWER: You might defeat one spade, perhaps by more than one trick, but it’s a mistake to go “headhuntin­g” and seek to penalize the opponents when your own prospects on offense are undetermin­ed. (Moreover, the opponents might have a better contract than one spade.) Bid two hearts, showing your support for partner’s suit. South dealer

N-S vulnerable

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States