Pujar no lo es todo

Dear BBOers, have a go at trying to solve this bridge problem. Your overall score will be displayed, along with the correct answers once you've complete the exercise. Good luck!

Pujar no lo es todo

Pujar no lo es todo


Mano 1

Contract: 6. West overcalled your opening bid of 1 with 4♣.
Lead: ♣A on which East plays the 2.

What’s your plan? (Trumps are 2-2).

Respuesta correcta:

c) Ruff, draw trumps and then play four more rounds of trumps.

With West marked with ten minor suit cards East is likely to have the major suit length. If he discards a Spade at any point you can play on Spades making unless the suit was 5-0. If East does not pitch a Spade, throwing two Clubs and a Heart, you can duck a Spade to East. If East keeps four Spades, two Hearts and a Club you cross to dummy with the ♠K and play a Spade to the 9.


Mano 2

Contract: 6 doubled.
After an exciting auction, where East opened 1 and subsequently supported his partner’s Spades, you have finished in 6 doubled by West.
Lead: ♠A.

Your declarer plan:

Respuesta correcta:

c) Ruff, and play the 9, planning to run it if
it is not covered.

Having ruffed the opening lead declarer runs the 9 of Hearts and plays a second Heart. If West ducks declarer comes to hand with a Club, cashes the Ace of Hearts and then plays on Clubs, losing only one trump trick.


Mano 3

Contract: 3NT.
Lead: ♠4, East follows with the 3.

What do you do?

Respuesta correcta:

b) Win in hand and duck a Diamond.

Needing to find one trick declarer wins in hand and ducks a diamond, East winning and playing a second Spade. Declarer wins, ducks another Diamond, wins the Spade return and ducks a Heart. West wins and will doubtless cash the long Spade before exiting with a Heart. Declarer wins and cashes the A. When East discards a Heart declarer must turn to the Club suit, cashing the ♣K and then crossing to dummy’s ace, having carefully unblocked dummy’s eight.


This article was written by Larry Cohen and was originally published in Bridgerama+.

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8 comments on “Bidding is not everything”
  1. yes, on #1 if E waits until the last club to pitch a spade, having 3 spades 2 hearts and 1 club, it does not make

  2. In the 3rd question you take 9 tricks without even messing with diamonds.

    If you cash K of clubs and play low to the A, you’ll have seen the T-9 fall, so you just finesse back the 8.

    If east covers with the 9 you take with Q and 7 of clubs is your 9th trick, if east ducks the 8 of clubs you finesse it, either way you’d make 9 without touching diamonds

  3. Probably needed better proof reading. If you ruff and draw trumps then play 4 more rounds of trumps on the first board, Dummy is squeezed on the last trump. The solution suggests a seven card endgame, which is consistent with ruffing, drawing trumps and then playing 3 more rounds.

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