Houston Chronicle

ACES ON BRIDGE

- By Bobby Wolff

Thanks to an opponent’s opening bid, declarer can place all the relevant missing high cards in today’s deal. It is now up to him to utilize that informatio­n. South has enough to balance with two spades on his fair sixcard suit, and North overbids when he raises to game. Three spades is the value call, which also keeps three no-trump in the game, a contract that is cold if played by South.

On the diamond king lead, declarer can see four losers. To telescope them into three, he must set up dummy’s long heart for a club discard while keeping East off lead for fear of a club shift.

Declarer could take an avoidance play in hearts, hoping to lose the lead to West. That would require West to hold something like queen-jack-low or jack-ten-nine, and even then, declarer may need some defensive cooperatio­n.

A better avoidance strategy is to throw a heart on one of West’s high diamonds. Declarer ducks trick one (as East plays the 10), wins the trump shift in hand and plays another diamond immediatel­y. If West were to play an honor, declarer would duck in dummy. When West follows small instead, South calls for the ace and returns the suit, bravely throwing a heart when East produces the nine. West has no choice but to win the trick. He persists with a trump, but declarer is in control. He wins in hand, cashes his high hearts ending in dummy, and ruffs a heart. He crosses back to dummy with the spade king, and the heart seven represents the gamegoing trick.

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