The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Daily Bridge Club

Lack of foresight

- By FRANK STEWART

Unlucky Louie is not known for foresight. He told me he had lent money to an acquaintan­ce who had been in an accident and needed facial reconstruc­tion surgery.

“Now he’s disappeare­d,” Louie said, “and I don’t know what he looks like.”

Louie was South in my club’s penny game. North-South would no doubt have made 3NT (not an easy contract to reach), but Louie played at five clubs. West led the ten of hearts: jack, queen, three. East shifted to a trump (not best).

SIGNAL

Louie drew trumps and led a spade, but West signaled “count” with the deuce, and East let dummy’s king win. He won the next spade and led the ace of hearts. Louie ruffed but had to lose a diamond for down one.

Louie succeeds with admirable foresight: He ruffs a heart at Trick Three. Louie then draws trumps and leads a spade to the king, winning. He ruffs a heart, dropping East’s ace, and leads a second spade. When East takes the ace, he is end-played, forced to lead a spade to dummy or a diamond from his king.

DAILY QUESTION

You hold: A 10 5 A Q 5 K 9 6 4 7 5 2. Your partner opens one club, and you jump to 2NT (forcing, 13 to 15 points, balanced). Partner rebids three clubs. What do you say?

ANSWER: Partner may be concerned about notrump or may be interested in slam. If you held A 9 5, Q52,AK76,752,youwouldbi­d three diamonds. As it is, try 3NT. (Some pairs treat a 2NT response to a minor-suit opening as invitation­al; I strongly dislike that treatment.) North dealer N-S vulnerable

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States