Hand of the day #171

The Aces On Bridge by Bobby Wolff


In today’s auction, South suggests a minimum opening with no shortage via his second-round jump to game. North keeps the auction alive by cue-bidding, and finally South upgrades his trump honors and his honors in the long suits to take a shot at slam.

Opening Lead: Q

From declarer’s point of view, when there are losers in only one suit (clubs) and the side-suits can be stripped out, clubs should be the last suit attacked. Declarer draws trumps, ruffs out the spades, then plays the diamond ace-king before leading a low club from dummy.

If East follows low, South can afford to play low as well, intending to take the finesse later. West wins the jack and has to give South a ruff and a sluff with a diamond or a spade play. South ruffs in dummy, discarding a club, then can take the club finesse to bag the slam.

So is the contract always makable? Not so fast! When declarer does not try to ruff a diamond in dummy, East can count out South’s hand precisely. He knows his partner had a singleton club. If it is a small singleton, the defense has no hope, But if the singleton is the jack or the queen, East has to try to circumvent the looming endplay.

Look what happens if East plays the club king and swallows his partner’s jack! After this diabolical defense, there is no way for South to avoid losing two club tricks.


Bid with the aces

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

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