After
a simple auction - 1NT-Pass; 3NT-End, your
partner leads the
6.
Which card should you play with each of the
following holdings, and why?
Case 1: Dummy has
Q 2, and declarer plays the queen.
a)
J 10 3
b)
J 9 7
c)
10 9 4
d)
10 8 3
e)
9 3
When you cannot cover dummy's honour partner may be interested in either
of two pieces of information: (1) how many
cards do you have in the suit led, or (2)
whether you hold a complementary honour (in
this case the jack). You cannot answer both
questions with a single card so you must
agree with your partner on one message or
the other. When dummy's honour is
unsupported (as here), it is more common to
signal information about the complementary
honour - option (2).
a) Play the jack, which usually shows the 10
but might be the winning play from jack-small
to unblock the suit. Picture partner with
ace-ten-sixth, declarer with king-third.
b) Play the nine, encouraging; this suggests
that you hold the important card card below
dummy's honour - the jack.
c) Play the 10, which shows the nine but
denies the jack (signal with the highest of
equal cards). This might help partner if he
holds KJxx.
d) Play the three, discouraging. Partner is
looking for the jack, not the ten.
e) Play the three, discouraging. Partner
cannot tell how many you have (this is not a
count situation) but he'll know that you
cannot help him develop the suit.
Case 2: Same auction. Dummy has the
Q J 2, and declarer calls for the queen.
f)
9 8 5
g)
10 5
h)
10 8 4 3
i)
10 8 7 5 3
This time partner's only interest will lie in the number of spades you
hold. He will want to know whether it is
safe to continue the suit (when he has led
from $K10764, for example) or whether your
side has a future in the suit (when he has
led from A10764, for example); he will lead
a second low spade in both these cases when
he believes you have three spades, but not
when you have only two.
f) Play the five, low from an odd number
reveals your count accurately.
g) Play the 10, highest from an even number
reveals the count
h) Play the eight; it is standard practice
to play second highest from four; with this
agreement in place, partner would read the
four as a doubleton or low from three, but
never from four (the deuce in dummy
precludes [say]8432).
i)Play the three, low from an odd number, as
in (f). Here, however, you have five, a
surprise. Partner seems to have found an
inspired lead from ace-third or king-third.
With the latter holding, it may not be
possible to unblock the suit in time. Nice
lead, partner, just the same