Rome News-Tribune

PHILIP ALDER

- BRIDGE

Sting, an Englishman who went from being a teacher to a rock musician, said, “A lot of people approach risk as if it’s the enemy when it’s really fortune’s accomplice.” Bridge players take risks all the time, some more iffy than others. But it is pleasing when a gamble pays off as you had hoped.

Look at the East hand in today’s diagram. With neither side vulnerable, your partner opens two spades, showing a six-card suit and 5-10 high-card points. North overcalls three spades, a Michaels Cue-bid promising at least 5-5 in hearts and either minor.

Many experts use something called Leaping Michaels.

North would jump to four clubs to show a heart club two-suiter. North’s hand is light for that action, but it gives a better descriptio­n than a three-heart overcall. (A three-spade cue-bid would show a long solid minor and ask partner to bid three no-trump with a stopper in the opener’s suit.)

What should East do now? At Bridge Base Online, all five Easts who faced this problem bid the “obvious” four spades. Then, when South advanced with five hearts, everyone passed. West understand­ably led the spade ace, but declarer ruffed on the board, drew trumps and ran the clubs to win all 13 tricks. East should anticipate this happening and not bid four spades; instead, he should interpose with four diamonds. Yes, this lets South bid four hearts, but East will then compete with four spades. The big plus, of course, is that West will now know what to lead against five hearts.

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