BRIDGE BITES #23
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AN
AFTERNOON NAP
Brian Gunnell |
♠ Q432
♥ J
♦ AKQT2
♣ J53 |
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E-W Vulnerable
South West North East
1♦
3♠
4♥
Pass Pass Pass
East’s 3♠ bid was
preemptive, showing a long suit (usually 7 cards) and a weak hand, its
purpose being to make life difficult for the opponents. And so it does,
pushing N-S into an ugly 4♥
contract which has 5 top losers.
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Dummy
West East
Declarer |
♠ 87
♥ AKQT98
♦ 98
♣ T86 |
West
cashes his three Clubs and then shifts to a Diamond. You win that in Dummy and
draw trumps, West following four times. Now, if you can bring home the Diamond
suit, both of those Spade losers will disappear and this rotten contract will
actually make! Do you play Diamonds from the top (hoping that they are 3-3 or
that East has Jx)? Or do you finesse the Ten (playing West to have Jxxx)?
►
It may be tempting to think “East
has seven Spades and West has none, therefore West is more likely to have
Diamond length” But that’s only part of the picture and you will, of course,
count the whole hand. The only explanation for the defense so far is that West
is void in Spades and that West does indeed have seven of them. So, West
started life with no Spades, four Hearts, and six Clubs. This leaves him with
three Diamonds, no more, no less! So, no guessing here, you confidently play
the Diamonds from the top and the Spade losers are thrown off. It pays to count
in this game!
►
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♠ Q432
♥
J
♦
AKQT2
♣ J53 |
|
♠
♥
7432
♦
753
♣ AKQ742 |
Dummy
West East
Declarer |
♠ AKJT965
♥
65
♦
J64
♣ 9 |
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♠ 87
♥
AKQT98
♦
98
♣ T86 |
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It also pays to stay awake. Yes,
you noticed, the defense was fast asleep! East must ruff the third Club, just
in case West has no Spades. Now the Spades are cashed and it is down two. Was
West blameless in this E-W fiasco?
►
Far from it! A more thoughtful
West would have woken up his dozing Partner by leading a low Club at
Trick 3. That will wake him up!
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