Hand of the day #732

Published 
April 26, 2026

You can now play the hand of the day on BBO+ and compare how you get on with the players in the article.

The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff

Opening Lead: 5

I am always happy to receive full-deal problems from my readers. Ray Dufour posed today's declarer-play problem. He asked how to play three no-trump on the lead of the heart five, and how declarer's strategy would vary, depending on what happened in the early tricks.

The first issue is what to play from dummy at trick one. It looks right to put up the queen — if you don’t, you cannot get any use out of that card. Let’s say the queen loses to the ace and the heart three comes back. Now it looks likely that hearts were 4-4, so you win the heart king (for fear of a spade shift) and run the club 10. If West puts up the queen, duck it. If East had returned a high heart spot (so that the suit appeared to be 5-3), duck the second heart, win the third, and try to sneak the club 10 past West — hoping he will forget to cover if he began with queen-third of clubs. If he covers, you will need the clubs to split 2-2.

Things are rather more complicated if the heart queen holds the first trick. Your possession of the heart four and two means that you can assume that if the heart three is played by East, then hearts are 4-4. So lead a low club from dummy. If you judge from East’s play to the first trick that hearts are 5-3, then play clubs from the top and hope the suit breaks.

Bid with the aces

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

If you’re a BBO+ member, you can now play the Hand of the Day directly on BBO as part of your membership benefits.

Go to the BBO+ section, select BBO+ Games and Events, then click Play Today’s Deal to give it a try and compare your result with the players featured in the article.

Click here to read earlier Hands of the day ▶

Share this hand with a friend:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

crossmenu