Daily Bridge Club
Combining chances
Unlucky Louie says that if at first you don’t succeed, you and he have a lot in common. Louie blames his miserable results on bad luck despite all the evidence to the contrary.
Louie was today’s South in a penny game at my club. Against his six spades, West led the ace of clubs and continued with the queen. Louie discarded a heart on dummy’s king and drew trumps. He next led a heart to dummy’s ace and returned a heart, finessing with the jack. West produced the queen to defeat the slam.
“My finesses never win,” Louie mourned. North mourned also — over the loss of 980 points.
DISCARD
Louie tried the wrong finesse, After he draws trumps, he should take the K-A of hearts. The queen doesn’t fall, but Louie isn’t done: He can lead a diamond to his jack. When that finesse wins, Louie takes the king, goes to dummy with a trump and discards his last heart on the ace of diamonds.
Combining chances is a common theme in dummy play. Louie would do better if he applied it.
DAILY QUESTION
You hold: K 10 9 A 7 3 2 A 3 2 K 8 3. You open one club, your partner responds one spade, you bid 1NT and he jumps to three clubs. What do you say?
ANSWER: Your partner’s jump-preference may be forcing or invitational — partnerships agree to treat it differently — but you should bid three spades. You have a sound hand and can accept an invitation, and your first obligation is to show three-card support for his suit. North dealer Neither side vulnerable