Tuesday 19 February 2013

Auto-pilot kicks in : kick him out!

You are East, the declarer in 4 after the following sequence:



North
East
South
West
Pass
1
Pass
2
Pass
2
Pass
3 (1)
Pass
3NT (2)
Pass
4 (3)
Pass
Pass
Pass

 

(1)    Fourth suit forcing to elicit further information. Game forcing.
(2)    Suggests a diamond stop – but what else?
(3)    Might have passed



Your left hand opponent, South, leads the 8 and you see:




AQJ
K9752
A2
KQJ7
J843
Q5
K1086
75



How do you plan the play?

Auto-pilot kicks in: win with the A, cash three rounds of trumps, cross back to K, draw the remaining trump (if one is outstanding), cash heart winners and lead towards the K. If the ace is onside, you make ten tricks. Easy. Move on to the next board.

Of course, this line implicitly assumes that spades are no worse than 4-1.

But what if they are not? Can you still make 4 if spades are 5-0? Well quite possibly - but probably not if you play like that.

4 always needs the K onside and taking that finesse early gives you an important extra chance. To see why, look at the full deal.


At our table, South did not lead a heart, but instead fired off with A and another club. Declarer, Julian Wightwick, showed neatly how to cope with the 5-0 spade break. Rising with the club king, he cashed the A, revealing the bad split. Then barely pausing for breath, he continued with A, K, heart ruffed with Q, club ruff, another heart ruffed in dummy and led a fourth club. North was helpless for this was now the position (rotated for convenience).




None


None


J843


6 (led)

None

10864
9

None
A762

K
J

None

K97


None


Q5


None





Whether he ruffed small or discarded, declarer could (over-) ruff and get off lead with a diamond. Left with K9 over the 108, he was sure to make two more tricks and his contract.

So, going back to the original problem, if you win the first trick with the K and lead a club, there is no defence. If South ducks, allowing your king to score, you must play a second club immediately to establish communications. North may win this second round of clubs and lead a trump but he has no second entry to play a second round of trumps prematurely.

It is true that in following this line there is a small risk that you will establish a cross-ruff situation for the defence - but is that likely on the bidding and opening lead?

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