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Here are some (advanced-to-expert level) deals from the tournament
trail:
First, on the road to the GNT Teams title, I
was amused as I turned the dummy:
|
♠
|
A 8 7 6 5 |
|
♥
|
A 9 8 |
|
♦
|
A K 10 2 |
| ♣ |
J |
I was dummy in 3NT (partner has shown a
flattish hand with 5 clubs and about 8-12 HCP). The opening lead
was a low diamond which ran to my partner�s jack. He returned a
diamond to dummy's 10 to play the ♠5
at trick 3.
The next trick shocked me. It went ♠5,
♠2,
♠3,
♠4
! Impossible? I had
never seen such a trick. Had somebody revoked? No. This was the
full deal:
|
|
|
North
(Larry)
|
|
|
♠
|
A
8 7 6 5
|
|
♥
|
A
9 8
|
|
♦
|
A
K 10 2
|
|
♣ |
J
|
|
|
|
|
West
|
|
|
East
|
|
♠
|
4 |
♠
|
Q
J 10 9 2 |
|
♥
|
Q
7 4 2 |
♥
|
J
6 3 |
|
♦
|
Q
9 5 3 |
♦
|
8
6 |
|
♣
|
K
Q 9 4 |
♣ |
10
5 3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South
|
|
♠
|
K
3
|
|
♥
|
K
10 5
|
|
♦
|
J
7 4
|
| ♣ |
A
8 6 3 2 |
Yes, East (a National champion) should have
split his spade honors, but he didn�t want to risk latter
getting endplayed in spades, so he nonchalantly played low � not
expecting the actual scenario. Anyway, this cost only an
overtrick. The other table played 4♠
down one on our cards. Believe it or not, that contract can make
even with the 5-1 trump split. There are many variations, but I
leave it to anyone with double-dummy software (such a GIB or
DeepFinesse to play around with this deal).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On this deal from a July regional
in Illinois, my partner produced expert defense:
|
|
|
North
|
Dlr: South
Vul: EW
|
|
♠
|
K Q 5 4
|
|
♥
|
Q 6 5
|
|
♦
|
A J
|
|
♣ |
A
J 4 2
|
|
|
|
|
West
(David)
|
|
|
East
(Larry)
|
|
♠
|
8 |
♠
|
A
J 10 9 3 2 |
|
♥
|
J
8 7 2 |
♥
|
-- |
|
♦
|
K
9 8 7 6 |
♦
|
10
4 3 2 |
|
♣
|
K
9 8 |
♣ |
Q
10 3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South
|
|
♠
|
7 6
|
|
♥
|
A K 10 9
4 3
|
|
♦
|
Q 5
|
| ♣ |
7
6 5 |
South opened 2♥
and North raised to 4♥.
As much as I love to bid 4♠
over 4♥,
at unfavorable vulnerability, I passed (good thing).
David led his singleton spade to the queen
and ace. I returned the ♠J
(I wanted to clarify the suit as opposed to playing a
suit-preference card).
David knew his trumps could be picked up
(declarer would start with the ♥A
to reveal the 4-0 break), so he had no natural trump tricks.
Should he ruff?
No. He followed the normal expert principle
of not "ruffing on air." He realized that even if he did
ruff, declarer would still get to use dummy's high spade for a
winner later in the deal.
He discarded a diamond, a winning defense.
Declarer played to the ♥A
revealing the break. Next came the ♥10,
ducked (a necessary, but easy defensive play). Now, declarer was
stuck. He could finesse the diamond, but nothing mattered.
Eventually, he took the ♥Q,
but couldn't get off dummy to draw the last trump.
Stuck in dummy, he had to play a black suit.
East gets in and keeps playing spades to promote West's ♥J.
Once David discarded at trick two, there was no way to make 4♥.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This freaky deal comes from a match we played
in the Spingold at the NABC in Nashville:
|
|
|
North
|
Dlr: West
Vul: None
|
|
♠
|
--
|
|
♥
|
A Q 10 7
5
|
|
♦
|
Q
J 8 4
|
|
♣ |
A
j 3 2
|
|
|
|
|
West
(David)
|
|
|
East
(Larry)
|
|
♠
|
AKQ76543 |
♠
|
J
10 9 8 2 |
|
♥
|
8
2 |
♥
|
9
6 |
|
♦
|
A |
♦
|
K
7 6 5 2 |
|
♣
|
K
6 |
♣ |
4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South
|
|
♠
|
--
|
|
♥
|
K J 4 3
|
|
♦
|
10 9 3
|
| ♣ |
Q
10 9 8 7 5 |
The (wild) bidding:
| West (David) |
North |
East (Larry) |
South |
| 1♣* |
Dbl** |
1♦& |
3♥&& |
| 4♠ |
5♥ |
Pass |
Pass |
| 5♠ |
Dbl |
Pass |
6♥ |
| Dbl |
Pass |
Pass |
Pass |
* Strong Club
** Red Suits or Black Suits
& Artificial,5-7
&& Pass or Correct
Had we bought it in 5♠,
the opening lead would have been crucial. On a diamond lead we
make 12 tricks (setting up the long diamond and eventually
throwing both hearts on the diamonds). Of course, the defense can
cash the first 3 tricks on a club or heart lead.
How about the lead against 6♥?
Also crucial. Yes, a spade lead would be disastrous (giving a
ruff-sluff), but actually, any lead but a diamond lets the
contract make. On a spade lead, declarer ruffs in hand
(throwing a diamond from dummy) and takes the next 11 tricks (5
hearts and 6 clubs). On a trump or club lead, declarer draws
trump, cashes some clubs and exits in diamonds, endplaying West
(the ruff-sluff gives the 12th trick). David did lead a high
diamond and he carefully shifted to a neutral trump and declarer
had to lose a second diamond trick for down one. (The other table
played 5♠
down 1 so our team had a small gain on this very dangerous deal).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Test your declarer play on this deal I played
in the NABC Swiss Teams in Nashville:
|
♠
|
A K
Q 10 9 7 6 |
|
♥
|
Q 3 |
|
♦
|
7 |
| ♣ |
A J
9 |
West opened 1♥
and East raised to 2♥.
What should I bid? Vulnerable at IMPs, I love to bid games that
might have a chance. Opposite as little as the ♣K,
I'd have play (even opposite ♣Q10x
and a spade entry for a finesse, I'd have a chance). Anyway, 4♠
might push them to 5♥--so
I jumped directly to the spade game and played it there.
|
|
|
North
|
Dlr: West
Vul: Both
|
|
♠
|
5 4
|
|
♥
|
10 6 5
|
|
♦
|
9
8 6 5 3
|
|
♣ |
K
8 2
|
|
|
|
|
West
|
|
|
East
|
|
♠
|
|
♠
|
|
|
♥
|
|
♥
|
|
|
♦
|
|
♦
|
|
| ♣ |
|
♣ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South
(Larry)
|
|
♠
|
A K Q 10
9 7 6
|
|
♥
|
Q 3
|
|
♦
|
7
|
| ♣ |
A
J 9 |
West leads a low heart to the ace and a heart
comes back, West playing the king and then the jack. You ruff and
draw trumps (West follows with the jack and then throws a heart
and a diamond).
How will you play the clubs?
The questions, of course, is premature. Why
not run some trumps first and see what happens?
You play another trump, LHO throwing his last
heart, RHO throwing a low club. Another trump gets a diamond from
LHO and a club from RHO. This leaves:
|
|
|
North
|
Dlr: West
Vul: Both
|
|
♠
|
--
|
|
♥
|
--
|
|
♦
|
9
8
|
|
♣ |
K
8 2
|
|
|
|
|
West
|
|
|
East
|
|
♠
|
|
♠
|
|
|
♥
|
|
♥
|
|
|
♦
|
|
♦
|
|
| ♣ |
|
♣ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South
(Larry)
|
|
♠
|
7
|
|
♥
|
--
|
|
♦
|
7
|
| ♣ |
A
J 9 |
Let's review. The first 3 tricks were hearts
and then you ran off 5 rounds of spades. LHO followed once and
threw away his last 2 hearts and 2 diamonds. RHO followed to three
spades and discarded 2 clubs.
Now what? There is no rush to make a club
play. You should exit with your little diamond. If the defenders
break clubs, you'll be delighted. Instead, LHO plays the ♦10
and RHO wins the ♦J,
then cashes the ♦A,
LHO dropping the ♦K.
You ruff, and ...
The entire hand should be known. RHO started
with:
|
♠
|
x x
x |
|
♥
|
A x
x |
|
♦
|
A J |
| ♣ |
10
x x x x |
How do you know? There is only one high
diamond missing--the queen. LHO must have it. Why? RHO raised to
only 2♥
and has already shown 9 HCP. You can be sure
LHO's last 3 cards are the ♦Q
and the doubleton ♣Q.
There is no need to run the ♣J
(West might cover from Q10 doubleton, forcing you to guess).
Simply play the ♣A
and ♣K
and when the ♣Q
drops, as expected, you claim 620. Our team won 12 IMPs for this
result when the declarer at the other table played clubs
prematurely and misguessed for down 1.
The full deal:
|
|
|
North
|
Dlr: West
Vul: Both
|
|
♠
|
5 4
|
|
♥
|
10 6 5
|
|
♦
|
9
8 6 5 3
|
|
♣ |
K
8 2
|
|
|
|
|
West
|
|
|
East
|
|
♠
|
J |
♠
|
8
3 2 |
|
♥
|
K
J 8 7 2 |
♥
|
A
9 4 |
|
♦
|
K
Q 10 4 2 |
♦
|
A
J |
| ♣ |
Q
7 |
♣ |
10
6 5 4 3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
South
(Larry)
|
|
♠
|
A K Q 10
9 7 6
|
|
♥
|
Q 3
|
|
♦
|
7
|
| ♣ |
A
J 9 |
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