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The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff
Opening Lead: There’s the rub!
Today's problem comes in two parts. Let's look at the opening lead first: What would be your choice as West here? You shouldn't seriously consider leading partner's suit. He hasn't bid it voluntarily — you dragged the bid out of him, and when he had the chance to double a club cuebid, he did not do so. Declarer rates to have six spades and four diamonds, so a club lead could be straight into a tenace. A top heart looks safe, but a trump is best, hoping to protect your holdings in all the outside suits. A trump will not always be safe, but the odds favor it not doing anything for declarer that he might not be able to do for himself. And you might kill a diamond ruff in dummy. And today it would defeat four spades.
But let’s see what the expert declarer did in four spades on the lead of the heart king. He won, cashed the spade ace and king, then led a diamond from dummy to his queen and ace. West was forced to return a diamond, and declarer won in dummy, unblocking his diamond eight, and played a third diamond to his nine and West’s 10, East pitching a discouraging club. What could West do now? Hoping that the diamond six would not prove an entry, he played the heart queen. Declarer ruffed, played the spade queen and another spade, and could win the club return with the ace, then cross to the diamond six to discard the club queen. Contract made!
Bid with the aces
Answer: Pass
The auction has made it clear that you rate to be facing a very weak hand with long clubs and short spades. If so, where do you think you want to play? I'd guess a club part-score — wouldn't you? If your partner has six clubs to the jack, he may take four tricks in his own hand in clubs and offer you none in a spade contract.
This Hand of the Day was originally published on aces.bridgeblogging.com.
You can now play the hand of the day on BBO+ and compare how you get on with the players in the article.