Counting by Mike Lawrence

Source: ACBL

aa

South was faced with a choice at his first turn in the auction. He could have made a takeout double, but he chose 1NT, which showed the value of his hand. North raised to 3NT, and West led the heart suit2. South won his ace and went to dummy with the spade suitA.

East followed with the queen, which gave South three spade tricks. Assuming the club finesse wins, South has nine tricks. So South led the J for a finesse and West won. East apparently had a lousy opener.

For the record, what does East have? If he has all of the remaining points, he started with the spade suitQ, the heart suit Q J, and the heart suit A Q. That’s 11 points. Not much of an opening bid. Perhaps his shape compensates a bit? We’ll see.

West continued with the spade suit10. Given the bidding, West obviously doesn’t have any more hearts, so his spade play is safe. Sort of. What now?

You have eight sure winners so another must come from diamonds or hearts. Since East has the rest of the heart suit, it looks like diamonds has to be the source of trick nine. Can you get a trick from diamonds if East has the ace and queen?

You don’t need to lead a diamond now You can afford to cash your black-suit winners first. When you do, you learn that East began with the singleton spade suitQ and two clubs. East has exactly five hearts, so he must have started with five diamonds.

Here is where counting comes into play. When you finish running spades and clubs, eight tricks will have been played: three spades, one heart and four clubs. Everyone has five cards left. If you watched East’s discards, you will know which five he has. Did he come down to three hearts and two diamonds? Or did he come down to four hearts and one diamond?

What should South do in each of these cases?

If East has three hearts and two dia-monds left, lead hearts and give East the lead with a heart. He will have to lead a diamond to dummy’s king at the end. Nine tricks.

If East has four hearts and one diamond left, you know he has the singleton heart suitA. You can lead a dia-mond, ducking it to East’s stiff ace. Again, you have nine tricks.

Here is the complete deal:

aa
Now that you can see all four hands, you can judge if the defense was okay. In fact, it wasn’t. If West, when he won the Q, had switched to the heart suit10, East would win the queen and go back to hearts. After this sequence, South would have no recourse. You can decide for yourself if West should have gotten this one right.

From his perspective, East has opened a very weak hand and the actual East construction is about the only excuse for an opening bid that he can have. West’s play of the spade suit10 was unlikely to work and West should have taken a few seconds to decide if the “safe” play of the spade suit10 was best.

MAS DEL MISMO AUTOR

Bridge & Humor: Heard at the Bridge Table

This is a true story that concerns a player...

Leading Low from a Doubleton Honor by Rixi Marcus

When, as a defender, you are about to attack from a holding such as J-x, Q-x or K-x, consider the possible advantage of leading a low card.

Making the Plan with Gilad Ofir

While South did have a first round control in hearts, the fact that he was pretty much minimum for his overcall argued against a first round contol-bid of six hearts along the way to the spade slam.

Mike Lawrence Asks You

When should you hold up and when should you win tricks as declarer? When can it be dangerous, to duck?

The Secret is in the Timing Part 3

"Good timing is especially necessary when there is a danger of being shortened in trumps"

Franck Riehm elected as WBF President

The World Bridge Federation is pleased to announce the...

1st South American Online Mixed Teams Championship

All players belonging to any NBO affiliated to the WBF are welcome!

I Brazilian Online Bridge Festival 2020

Some of the best players in the world are Brazilians, and some of the most enthusiastic players too! Our Brazilian Online Festival has appeal to players of all levels. Your team will play in a friendly but competitive atmosphere, with very well-organized scoring and experienced Directors to ensure a pleasant experience for all.

WBF Robot Tournaments

Come and join the competition through our Providers, BBO, Funbridge and Ourgame, all offering you this great opportunity – we look forward to some challenging tournaments!”

The Endplay

An endplay (also throw-in), in bridge, is a tactical play where a defender is put on lead at a strategic moment, and then has to make a play that loses one or more tricks.

The Scissors Coup by John Brown

Scissors coup (or, Scissor coup, ) is a type of coup in bridge, so named because it cuts communications between defenders.

World Bridge Federation – Youth

The Championship is open to all players born on or after 1st January 1992 (Juniors & Girls) or born on or after 1st January 1997 (Youngsters) or born on or after 1st January 2002 (Kids) in good standing with their own NBOs.

Prevent a Ruff by Jon Brown

West led his singleton club, which dummy's king won. South read the lead as a singleton.

RELACIONADOS

CATEGORIAS POPULARES