Missed It Again

Author: Larry Cohen
Date of publish: 03/01/2024
Level: Intermediate to Advanced

For the eight month in a row, we are at the Senior Team Trials. Try playing with the South cards here:

♠ 2  
♥ J9872  
♦ J43  
♣ KJ109.
 

Partner opens 2♠ and you wait with 2♠. LHO overcalls 2♠ and you eventually land in 6♠:

 

♠ J9765
♥ AKQ
♦ AK5
♣ AQ
 
♠ 2
♥ J9872
♦ J43
♣ KJ109

The ♠A is led (East follows with what looks to be the singleton king) and West shifts to a low trump, won in dummy.

Now what? Can you find anything better than hoping the ♠Q falls? How about throwing a diamond from dummy on the clubs and trying to ruff a diamond in dummy? Sounds like a lot of good breaks would be needed.

My teammate played skillfully. He drew trump (they were 3-2), ruffed another spade in hand (LHO started with AQ10xxx) and he ran winners. This was the Real Deal:

 

 

 

Vul:None
Dlr: North

♠ J9765
♥ AKQ
♦ AK5
♣ AQ
 
♠ AQ10843
♥ 104
♦ Q86
♣ 32
  ♠ K
♥ 653
♦ 10972
♣ 87654
  ♠ 2
♥ J9872
♦ J43
♣ KJ109
 

As you can see, on the run of the clubs and hearts, West was squeezed. He had to keep a high spade, so he threw his diamonds. Now, declarer was able to take 3 diamond tricks for +980.

Skillful yes, but not the best line of play. As so often happens, even experts miss a dummy reversal.

With hearts breaking 3-2, there was no need for this squeeze. The contract can be made even if East holds the ♠Q!

Declarer should win the trump switch and ruff a spade in hand. Another trump to dummy reveals the 3-2 split. (If trumps were 4-1, then declarer would indeed have to draw trump and resort to the squeeze line).

In dummy with the second trump, declarer simply ruffs a spade, crosses in a minor and ruffs the last spade. Now he crosses to dummy to draw the last trump (throwing a low diamond) and claims. Try it!