In no-trump you should aim to play on…by Liz Mcgowan

scotland on sunday logo Saturday 13 July 2013

SOMETIMES defenders attack in a weak spot. This may mean you have to abandon Plan A, and adopt countermeasures instead. Can you find an effective plan B here?

Mano de bridge de liz Mcgowan

East saw no reason to insist on a spade contract – his long suit might provide ample tricks for 3NT and the other unbid suits were covered. North led the seven of diamonds and South took the ace, then switched to the ten of hearts. Declarer covered with the king, which scored. He now had eight Sure Tricks, two spades, one heart, two diamonds and three clubs. He took the spade finesse, but South produced the queen and led the nine of hearts. Since North has started with AJ8x there were three heart losers to go with the two tricks the defenders had already taken, and declarer was one down. ‘Well defended’ was the best he could say, but dummy was not impressed. How would dummy have played?

If hearts are 4-3 with the ace over your king-queen you have three heart losers – but by losing three hearts you can establish your fifth heart as your ninth trick. In any case, there is little to lose by cutting defenders’ communications, so you should return a low heart at trick three. If South wins and returns a heart it is easy to establish the long heart, discarding spades from dummy. If South switches back to diamonds you can win in hand and play another low heart. Even if South started with a doubleton and North has AJ876 he cannot cash two more hearts without establishing your queen; and if he does not cash the ace of hearts you can afford a losing spade finesse after all.

[box]A variation on the old principle that in a no-trump contract you should aim to play on the suits where you already have losers, rather than find extra losers by playing on stronger suits.[/box]

MAS DEL MISMO AUTOR

The rules for (playing) bridge By George Cuppaidge

When you first learn bridge you are inundated with rules, third hand high, second hand low, do not finesse against partner. None of these “rules” are a substitute for working it out for yourself.

Winner of the WBF Women’s Online Bridge Festival 2015

Adriana Dutu from Romania who has won the WBF Women's Online Bridge Festival held from 13 - 19 April

Serious and Non-serious 3NT By Barry Rigal

This brings us to one of the more important patches that 2/1 requires. When in my youth I first read about these methods, Edgar Kaplan remarked that the problem with game-forcing sequences was...

The Art of Sacrificing By Bob Crosby

Sacrificing is an art rather than just a Bridge skill. Beginning Bridge players sacrifice too much in IMPS giving the opponents a “fielders choice” of doubling rather than take their iffy games.

A sensational Slam By A. Sheinwold

It was Charles Monk, one of Belgium's leading experts, and he had a sensational bridge hand to talk about.

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

Previous article
Next article