Desperate Measures

Author: Larry Cohen
Date of publish: 04/01/2024
Level: Intermediate

 

♠ --
♥ KQ1098732
♦ 102
♣ KJ3
 
♠ K84
♥ AJ
♦ AJ873
♣ 972

Last year, I was dragged out of semi-retirement to play in a local Regional. In the knocout finals, our team was trailing late in the match and we surely needed a few big swings. An opportunity arose when I was dealt (neither side vulnerable):

♠ K84
♥ AJ
♦ AJ873
♣ 972

Partner opened 4♠ (Namyats). What's that? Stayman spelled backwards, of course. This convention is used to show a "good" 4-of-a-Major opening bid (stronger than opening 4). Partner's 4♠ bid showed a good 4♠ opener and I could bid 4♠ with slam interest. More than interested (I'd say "desperate") I overbid by jumping directly to 6♠.

The ♠A was led and I saw:

I was hoping for a bit more, but at least I had a chance. Sure, the clubs might be friendly, but there is something better. Do you see it? I ruffed in dummy and hoped to set up my diamonds. The key is not to draw even one round of trump. I came to the ♠A, threw a diamond on the ♠K and trumped a diamond high (all following). A heart to the ace for another diamond ruffed high saw everyone follow to all of those red cards. Now a heart to the jack drew the last trump and two good diamonds gave me 12 very lucky tricks:  

Vul:None
Dlr:North
♠ --
♥ KQ1098732
♦ 102
♣ KJ3
 
♠ AJ932
♥ 54
♦ Q54
♣ 865
  ♠ Q10765
♥ 6
♦ K96
♣ AQ104
  ♠ K84
♥ AJ
♦ AJ873
♣ 972

With the clubs wrong, it was necessary to play as described. Notice that with a club lead, I can't even make 4♠! It's hard to blame West for the opening lead -- a bit of a guess.

We did win this battle but lost the war. We fell just short in our comeback attempt.