Hand of the day #94

The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff


In four hearts, South ruffed the lead of the club king in dummy and paused for reflection. One slim chance for declarer would be to pin everything on the spade finesse and a 2-2 heart break. He could overtake the Q with the ace, take a spade finesse, cash the spade ace, ruff a spade high to establish the suit, and play a heart to dummy, hoping that would draw both outstanding trumps.

Opening Lead: ♣K

South preferred to play a diamond at trick two, which East won with the king to switch to a trump. Declarer won in the dummy and played a second diamond. West won with the queen and had no further trump to play. Whatever he did, declarer could come to six trump tricks in his hand, two club ruffs in the dummy, and the ace and queen of spades.

Curiously, when declarer played a second round of diamonds, best defense would have been for East to ruff in. He then plays his last trump, removing the last trump from dummy. Alas for the defense, look what happens to West when declarer wins in hand and plays off his trumps.

In the six-card ending, South leads out his penultimate trump, his other four cards being two spades and two clubs. Dummy has four spades and two diamonds. West must keep three spades and also two diamonds to prevent that suit from being ruffed out, and so must pitch his club. Declarer’s J-10 of clubs can be built into a trick, and the spade finesse sees him home.


Bid with the Aces

This Hand of the Day was originally published on aces.bridgeblogging.com.

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2 comments on “Hand of the day #94”

  1. 2d is better than 4d. In the second case in fact you are risking when the partner has just two hearts and /or 15pp. On the contrary with 2d you can ask after 2h to north if he would like to play manche or not... in fact you can bid 3h as invitation

  2. What about leading a spade to the J at trick 2? It seems to work against any 3-2 spade split. Of course, it fails if one opponent has Kxxx and will generally fail against a singleton K.

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