The Mercury News

Aces on Bridge

- Contact Bobby Wolff at bobbywolff@mindspring.com

DEAR MR. WOLFF: I’m considerin­g taking up inverted minors. The textbooks present different approaches; would you recommend they be played as constructi­ve, forcing for one round or forcing to game?

— Weird Science

ANSWER: Inverted minors apply only in noncompeti­tive auctions, but they are in play for either passed or unpassed hands. They are forcing for one round if made by an unpassed hand. I suggest that if either opener or responder limits their hand with a rebid of two no-trump or three of the agreed minor at their next turn, that can be passed; otherwise, the partnershi­p is in a game-forcing auction.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: Last week when we went to the wrong table, we started playing a board before the error was corrected. When we began it at a new table, we got a top — but the director said that because the opening bid was different by our opponents, the result would be canceled. Was this legally correct?

— Chain of Fools

ANSWER: While the director will try to let a partially played deal be tackled by the proper pairs, here it sounds like your second opponents might not have had a fair crack at the board. That is because you knew extra informatio­n from the two opening bids you heard, so it is at the director’s discretion as to whether the result should stand.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: I picked up SPADES Q-J-9-4, HEARTS K-6, DIAMONDS A-9-3, CLUBS Q-J-4-2 and opened one club. Over my left-hand opponent’s overcall of one diamond, my partner doubled to show both majors. I bid one spade, eventually ending up in two spades. We had 24 high-card points between us, and we made game easily enough. Should I have bid two spades at my second turn, as my partner suggested?

— Punk Rocker

ANSWER: This is a complex issue. A jump to two spades suggests four spades, in response to the known four-card suit; you might have to bid one heart or one spade with a three-card suit if you don’t have a diamond stopper. In the same way, when you open a minor and hear your partner double one heart, you jump to two spades with four trumps in anything but a dead-minimum balanced hand.

DEAR MR. WOLFF: I opened one diamond with SPADES Q-8-2, HEARTS A-Q-6, DIAMONDS A-9-4-2, CLUBS Q-9-3 and heard my left-hand opponent overcall one heart. Now my partner bid two clubs, and my righthand opponent bid two spades. It feels like I have some extras and fit, but should I pass, raise or bid no-trump now?

— Musical Chair

ANSWER: Two no-trump suggests a non-minimum hand and reasonable stoppers in the majors. Unless your left-hand opponent has good spades (in which case partner may be short and might not raise to three no-trump), I like the idea of getting no-trump in now. But change the club queen to the jack, and I might pass.

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