The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff
At the Dyspeptics Club, South’s high opinion of his own declarer-play skills is matched only by North’s low opinion. In today’s deal North was a little concerned that he might have missed a slam. So he was less than pleased when declarer went down in game.
Opening Lead: ♥K
Against four spades West led the heart king, and without giving the matter much thought, South called for the ace from dummy. Declarer looked aggrieved when East ruffed, and even more so when the club jack was returned. The queen lost to the king, West cashed a heart, and eventually South lost a diamond to go one light.
Four hearts was a big bid for West to make, vulnerable, and South should have guarded against the bid being based on an eight-card suit. Declarer can afford to play low on the heart lead, and low again on the heart continuation. Should a third heart be played, East ruffs the ace, but South overruffs, pulls trumps, then runs the diamond 10. Although this loses to East’s queen, there is now a diamond available on which to discard the club loser, and declarer’s losses are held to two hearts and one diamond.
Nor does it help the defense if East trumps his partner’s second heart lead and returns a club. South rises with the ace, then draws trumps, again losing just three tricks since a loser can be pitched on the heart ace.
Bid with the Aces
Answer: 4♦
Your partner’s call, opposite your balanced raise to game suggesting 13-15 points, indicates he has slam interest and a good club suit. Your club support may be weak, but your controls are superb and you have a maximum in high cards. So cue-bid four diamonds and be prepared to cooperate in any slam venture.
This Hand of the Day was originally published on aces.bridgeblogging.com.