The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff
Sometimes one has to consider a single suit in the context of the bidding and play thus far. One auction by your opponents may push you one way; another auction may drive you in a different direction.
Opening Lead: ♣Q
You reach four hearts after East has bid strongly in clubs, and ruff the second club, West showing a doubleton. Now a spade goes to West’s queen and dummy’s king, and now a trump to the …?
If East had the doubleton heart ace, he would surely have risen with it and played a third club for the trump promotion. If your opponents are competent enough to find this play but did not do so, it was presumably because West does not have the heart queen. So play a trump to the jack — this also caters for most of the 3-1 breaks too.
Conversely, say you reach four hearts with the same North-South cards but after West opened the bidding and showed both minors. West leads a top club (East playing a discouraging card) and shifts to a diamond; you call for dummy’s king and East plays the eight — presumably top of a doubleton.
How should you play trumps? The point now is that you need East to have one of the top hearts if you are to have any chance. If he has the queen, then West will take the first trump and give his partner an overruff in diamonds. So your only chance to make the hand — unlikely as it may be — is to lead a trump back to your king.
Bid with the aces
Answer: 3♠
Although you have a minimum hand, your spades are decent. However, you have weak hearts and perhaps a wasted diamond king. It is a tough call whether to sign off in three hearts or advance with three spades. I prefer the latter if only because spades might play so much better than hearts on the right day.
This Hand of the Day was originally published on aces.bridgeblogging.com.
Why not agree spades and show where your meagre values lie by bidding 3D?
Might help partner evaluate Qx + x in the minors.
3 hearts