Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Can you spot the book play?

- By Phillip Alder © 2022 UFS, Dist. by Andrews McMeel for UFS

There are many plays described in bridge books. There are also deals on which the book play is wrong, for one reason or another. Sometimes the problem is deciding into which category a particular deal fits. At other times it is recognizin­g the book play in an unusual guise.

South’s overcall of one notrump showed a good 15 to 18 points. North’s raise to game was aggressive. He debatably added a point for his weak five-card suit.

West led the spade seven: two, jack, six. When East continued with the spade king, South won with his ace. Now declarer led the club queen from his hand. If West had won with the king, he would have been unable to lead another spade, so he ducked the trick to his partner’s ace. East continued with the queen

and another spade, establishi­ng his nine, but he had no reentry. Declarer conceded a club to West’s king and claimed nine tricks: two spades, three hearts, one diamond and three clubs. The diamond finesse wasn’t needed.

The defenders shrugged their shoulders, compliment­ing South on his duck at trick one. South thanked them, but he knew better. He had noticed that if East plays the spade nine (or four) at trick one, the contract can be defeated. South wins with the spade 10 and leads a club, but West flies in with the king and returns his second spade. East’s suit is establishe­d while he still holds the club ace as an entry.

In a no-trump contract, when declarer has two stoppers in the suit you are trying to establish, make him use one of them as quickly as

possible.

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