Source: http://www.andrewrobson.co.uk/
– – 2 2 |
|
A Q – – – |
|
K 2 – – |
Spades are trumps. You cannot score a trick with your
K if you are on lead. But if dummy is leading, you can score your
K “en passant”, by leading either card. If East ruffs with
Q, you overruff with
K; and if East ruffs with
A. you discard, and
K is promoted.
9 2 6 5 3 2 A K 3 2 7 4 2 |
||
J 8 J Q 10 9 7 K Q J 9 6 3 |
Q 10 7 6 5 Q 9 8 7 J 8 5 8 |
|
A K 4 3 A K 10 4 6 4 A 10 5 |
| West | North | East | South |
1![]() |
2![]() |
2![]() |
|
| Pass | 2NT1 | Pass | 4 2 |
| Pass | Pass | Pass |
- In case North has raised with three cards.
- Marginal, but he does have an ace-king and a ruffing value (in spades).
4 by North; lead 8 |
What happened
Declarer won
K lead with
A (West’s overcall made it likely East’s
8 was singleton). He then cashed the
A, felling West’s
J, and followed with
K (hoping for West to have
QJ, his only chance of avoiding a trump loser).
West discarded on the second trump, and now declarer cashed
AK, trumped a spade (West discarding), and led a trump towards
10. East took
Q, then led
Q10. Declarer could only score
10 and
AK – down one.
What should have happened
Even after cashing two top trumps, declarer can make not only his contract, but also an overtrick. It’s all about scoring his trumps:
Win
, cash
AK, then follow with
AK and ruff a third spade. Cash
AK, ruff a third diamond, then ruff a fourth spade with dummy’s last trump. Here is the three-card ending with the lead, crucially, in dummy:
3 7 4 |
||
![]() ![]() Q Q J |
Q Q 9![]() ![]() |
|
![]() 10 10 5 |
3 lead ensured a trick, an almost unbelievable 11th, for
10. Both defenders (in a sense) won the last two tricks. Game made plus one.
If you remember one thing…
Scoring trumps “en passant”.

