Security Improvements, Access Code & Mail Communication Preview

All News

Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Fortune favours the brave.

Well, you do not need to be too brave with as there are various ways to achieve a good result with today’s deal. It is complicated by the fact that it was played in the Pairs environment which means the top score may not be the best contract. What, then, would you bid as East after the following sequence:

Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg

     

South Deals
Both Vul

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

A

A K Q 10 9 4 3

Q J 9 3 2

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

Pass

1 ♠

Pass

2 

Pass

3 ♠

Pass

?

 

Your partner has a good hand with spades. You have potentially an even better one with hearts. Will they blend well together? What do you bid next?

Key Card problems

If your partner’s assets contained one of the top diamonds, you would want to bid a minimum of 6…but which should be the trump suit? Then, as we are playing Pairs, there is the chance that no-trumps is the best score.

Asking for key-cards, with spades as trumps, is certainly one approach though you could still make grand-slam with one ace missing while you could go down in small slam were your partner to be missing the top two (cashing) diamonds.

So, Key Card is not the best approach, at least not initially. Why not try a 4Club-small cue-bid, pretending (well, you may yet make spades trumps) spades are the agreed trump suit? If partner can cue the Diamond-smallA or Diamond-smallK, you are in better shape to continue, once more with a club cue and if partner’s response was 5Diamond-small (showing both diamond top honours), you could try an immediate 7Heart-small (they have far more than Diamond-smallAK for that 3Spade-small jump).

That was not the story today and ironically, Key Card after 4Diamond-small would have worked out rather well as partner’s response would be 5Diamond-small showing 0 or 3, obviously the latter. A king ask would show one, maybe 6Club-small if it was specific king ask and the absence of the Diamond-smallK may well make East nervous about grand slam.

It might be better if you can sign off in 6Heart-small though your partner might view that bid suspiciously and bid their suit again. Knowing partner has Club-smallK, you should be safe to try 6NT.

These then were the four hands with the bidding sequence described above:

South Deals
Both Vul

J 6 3

8 7 6 2

8 7 6

Q 10 4

K 10 9 8 5 4 2

J

A 10

A K 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

A

A K Q 10 9 4 3

Q J 9 3 2

 

Q 7

5

K 5 4

J 9 8 7 6 5 3

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

Pass

1 ♠

Pass

2 

Pass

3 ♠

Pass

4 ♣

Pass

4 

Pass

4 NT

Pass

5 

Pass

5 NT

Pass

6 ♣

Pass

6 

Pass

6 ♠

Pass

6 NT

All pass

Of course, knowing your partner has Diamond-smallA may well encourage East to try 7Heart-small though the absence of Heart-smallJ would be another concern for East before they saw dummy.

At some tables (it would be interesting to know how many. Have vulnerable pre-empting standards slipped that low?!), South might start with 3Club-small which does give East a problem after West’s 3Spade-small bid. It would be a very sad day when West could not produce either diamond honour. Trust South to have their high cards in clubs! No further comment!

The play

7Heart-small is a good contract especially if South starts with a black suit. Declarer then can cross to Heart-smallJ (after unblocking Club-smallA after a club lead) and ruff a spade, a certain make when there is a 3-2 spade break and requiring the diamond finesse if the suit breaks 4-1. (Hopefully, the heart break is not 5-0..we have already played one round of trumps and will discover that bad break early.)

If South can find a red suit lead, East will need a successful diamond finesse to make all 13 tricks. If the finesse fails, you might really wonder what South had for their club preempt. 

The diamond finesse will be needed in 6 or 7NT as spades can only produce two tricks without a loser, most of the time. There are 7 top heart tricks, AK of both black suits and at least 2 diamonds whether the finesse fails or succeeds. (If the finesse fails, 6NT is a better spot!smile) Meanwhile, there is an obvious trump loser in 6Spade-small where an initial heart lead is rather annoying though by no means terminal. 

However, this is a good day where the diamond finesse worked and whatever the lead, in hearts or no trumps you can make all 13 tricks. If you can bid and make 7Heart-small, that’s great. Pay out to the one or two who go for 7NT. You still will have an excellent result.

Richard Solomon

Go Back View All News Items

Our Sponsors
  • Tauranga City Council
  • TECT.jpg