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The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff
Opening Lead: ♥3
In today's deal from a knockout match, there were instructive points for both declarer and the defenders.
In both rooms West led his singleton heart against four spades. In one room declarer won and played the king and ace of spades. When East showed out, declarer started cashing hearts, but when West ruffed and exited with a trump, declarer had nine tricks and no more.
In the other room, when East’s 10 appeared on the first round of trump, South could foresee that both major suits were likely to break badly. So, at trick three, he played a diamond, ducking East’s nine. East gave his partner a heart ruff, but that only worked to declarer’s advantage. If West now played a trump, declarer had 10 tricks, so he did the best he could by playing a diamond, but declarer discarded from dummy and made the rest of the tricks.
East should have worked out to continue with a second diamond rather than switch to a heart. If he does, all declarer can do is ruff in dummy and play a heart, but West trumps and plays the diamond ace. Again, declarer has only nine tricks. So can you see where both declarers went wrong?
After the heart lead, declarer simply needs to play four rounds of trump, giving West his trump trick. What can West do? A diamond is fatal, so he must play a club, covered by the jack, king and ace. Declarer simply plays a second club to establish his 10th trick in that suit.
Bid with the aces
Answer: 2♣
Until you know the secret, it may perhaps be tempting to raise spades here. The best call, though, is to bid two clubs, expecting to be able to raise spades at your next turn. This will show extras with three spades. If over two clubs your partner inquires with two diamonds, the fourth suit, jump to three spades to show extras with three-card support.
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.