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PLAY and DEFENCE for Improving Players
TUNNEL VISION
It is a really good idea to look at your hand and dummy after the opening lead is made and see what can be done with all the losers in your hand. Then and only then should you play to the first trick. There is, though, a hand type when such a look is not sufficient.
When you are in grand slam, you have to do something with these losers, or else you will be writing in a minus score! So, after a bidding sequence which bordered on the bizarre (both opponents bid diamonds up to the 5 level!), you are faced with making all 13 tricks on the lead of 5. What’s your plan?
South Deals E-W Vul |
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West | North | East | South |
Dummy | Declarer | ||
1 ♠ | |||
Pass | 2 NT | 3 ♦ | 4 NT |
5 ♦ | Dbl | Pass | 5 ♠ |
Pass | 7 ♠ | All pass |
2NT was Jacoby, game force with spade support. 5x would have been quite lucrative for the defence but that was not the problem now. Our South said a prayer of thanks that the heart loser could be discarded on the fourth round of clubs and that two hearts could be ruffed in dummy while the third would be discarded on A.
That’s a great plan when trumps break 2-2 but when they do not, you have a problem. In fact, trumps broke 3-1 but all had to be drawn before clubs were played or else a club ruff would have beaten the contract. Eventually, there was nowhere for the J to go (only one heart could be ruffed) and the contract failed by one trick.
A better line
Could declarer have done better? The answer is “yes” and the solution was to look at dummy a little more closely. A dummy reversal…or setting up dummy rather than your own hand. If the North hand was declarer’s, then declarer would play the board very differently from above. So why not play it that way now?
South Deals E-W Vul |
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7 ♠ by South |
If you can ruff three diamonds in the South hand, North’s heart loser can be discarded, as above, on the fourth round of clubs. As long as trumps do not break 4-0 (which defeats the other method too), you should be fine. West even helped you by leading a diamond.
So, ruff the diamond and play a trump to the king. Ruff a second diamond and play a heart to the ace and play J ruffing with J. Now play A, club to the ace, draw West's last trump with Q and then three more rounds of clubs with your last two cards in dummy being 7 and A…13 tricks, even when spades broke 3-1. Be thankful for the diamond lead because the 4-1 club break and 3-1 spade break will make the hand pretty impossible on a club or heart lead, barring an amazing low level trump finesse!
We can be too fixed on dealing with the losers in our own hand and do not look for ways of setting up the dummy hand. Ruffing three diamonds was quite possible, especially after both opponents had bid the suit….but that was the best line anyway after the diamond lead.
Richard Solomon