Greenwich Time

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

- Frank Stewart

“Dickens didn’t have enough ghosts in `A Christmas Carol,’” my friend the English professor told me pedantical­ly in the club lounge. “There should have been a ghost of Christmas future perfect subjunctiv­e to show Scrooge what would have happened were he not to have changed his ways.”

When you’re declarer, you get one chance, so consider before you play. Today’s North-South reached a shaky slam when both players bid too aggressive­ly.

South took the ace of clubs and led a trump to his jack.

He went to the jack of diamonds, led a second trump to his queen and took the ace.

Declarer next took the A-K of diamonds. With a 4-3 break, he could have pitched all of dummy’s hearts and ruffed a heart, losing one heart at the end. As it was, he had to ruff his fifth diamond and lost two hearts when West had the A-Q.

Things will happen differentl­y if declarer starts the diamonds before he takes the ace of trumps. He discards three hearts from dummy on the A-K-Q, then leads the king of hearts. West wins and leads a club. Declarer ruffs, ruffs his last diamond in dummy, ruffs a club, ruffs his last heart with dummy’s last trump.

DAILY QUESTION Youhold:S7653 HJ1083DJCA­962. Both sides vulnerable. Your partner opens one heart, and the next player doubles. What do you say?

ANSWER: To raise to three hearts would be reasonable. That action would be preemptive. With a good hand you would offer a redouble or some convention­al call. Many players would bid three hearts with a rather weaker hand: 7653, J1083, 5, K962. Hence they might prefer to bid two hearts, intending to compete to the three level to suggest a more promising hand.

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