Aces on Bridge — Daily Columns

The Aces on Bridge: Monday, October 14th, 2019

If a state should pass laws forbidding its citizens to become wise and holy, it would be made a byword for all time. But this, in effect, is what our commercial, social, and political systems do. They compel the sacrifice of mental and moral power to money and dissipation.

John Spalding


N North
E-W ♠ K Q 7
 8 4
 A Q J 8 7
♣ Q 3 2
West East
♠ A 9 6
 A 10 3
 K 2
♣ 10 9 8 7 5
♠ 10 5 3 2
 Q 9 2
 6 4 3
♣ A K 6
South
♠ J 8 4
 K J 7 6 5
 10 9 5
♣ J 4
South West North East
    1 Pass
1 Pass 1 NT Pass
2 All pass    

♣10

Today’s hand comes from the finals of the 1999 U.S. trials and shows Peter Weichsel in action, making a thoughtful assumption in the trump suit.

The final contract at both tables was two hearts by South, East and West having passed throughout.

At the first table, West led the club 10. East took the king and ace and played a third club, won in dummy with the queen. Declarer then led a heart to the jack, which looks to be the normal play. However, West won with the ace, cashed the spade ace, then played a fourth round of clubs, which East ruffed with the queen. This promoted an extra trump for the defense; they could now take three trump tricks in addition to their three black-suit winners, which spelled one down for declarer.

At the second table, the defenders cashed all three of their black-suit winners before playing a third club. On winning in dummy, Weichsel came to the conclusion that, after East had produced 7 points in clubs, he would not have both the heart ace and queen as well, because then he might have entered the auction. Weichsel realized how the fourth round of clubs could lead to the demise of his contract, so he continued on the assumption that East held the heart nine or 10 (or both).

Declarer called for the heart eight from dummy, and when East played low, he let it ride. West won with the 10, but now a club return could no longer lead to a trump promotion. Contract made.



It seems normal to lead partner’s suit, but this may be our only time on lead, so we should aim to do some damage with it. Only one diamond winner is likely to stand up here, given our length. So, our best bet may be to lead a top heart through dummy’s hypothetical tenace. One or two quick tricks in the suit may be all we need, and if we do not take them now, they may go away on dummy’s clubs.

LEAD WITH THE ACES

♠ J 5
 Q J 7 6
 8 6 3 2
♣ J 5 3
South West North East
Pass 1 ♣ 1 1 ♠
2 3 ♣ 3 4 ♠
All pass      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Sunday, October 13th, 2019

I don’t ever seem to have a hand where I want to play a part-score in the minor facing a no-trump opening bid. So, would it make sense to play transfers into a minor suit as at least invitational?

Humble Pie, Willoughby, Ohio

My experience and yours do not mesh. With a weak hand and a long suit, you really should play the minor suit, I believe. As an aside, I can understand using a two-spade response to one no-trump as a balanced range ask or a hand with one minor and invitational values, so that transfers to a minor are either weak or strong (and Stayman now guarantees a major). But that would require detailed discussion.

What should you do when holding ♠ 5-2,  K-10-4-3,  J-9,  A-Q-7-6-2 if you heard your partner open one diamond and the next hand overcall one heart? Is this hand really a two-club call, or would you elect to play for penalty?

Apple Pie Order, Beaverton, Ore.

If you gave me just one guess, I would say it was right to bid one no-trump, but to compete in clubs if the opponents bid spades. The attraction of bidding one no-trump is that you allow your partner to act again if he has either extras in shape or values.

What, if any, are some simple rules that will help me master the general principles of the percentages? Number Crunchers Anonymous, Union City,

Tenn.

An even number of cards are less likely to break than to divide evenly (with the exception of the 1-1 break). The more cards missing, the closer to onethird is the likelihood of an even break. An odd number of cards will usually break as evenly as possible — and the more cards that are out, the closer to twothirds is the likelihood of that break. In those instances, the next-most even break comes in at about a 1 in 5 chance.

My experienced partner threw me a curve, and I dropped the ball. How would you cope with ♠ J-7-4-2,  A-2,  K-6, ♣ K-J-9-5-2 after opening one club and hearing one spade on your left, then three spades from your partner?

Scoring Table, Bremerton, Wash.

A jump cue-bid here should have a very precise meaning. It is a raise in clubs with a singleton spade — in other words, a splinter raise. Your hand is not suitable for no-trump, but it is very suitable for clubs (imagine partner with the heart and diamond controls, plus five clubs to the ace). Cue-bid four diamonds now — don’t even think of bidding three no-trump or closing out the auction at five clubs.

How would you respond to a two-diamond opening if you held ♠ Q-J-7,  K-9-3,  A-7-4-2, ♣ Q-10-4? How would you rate passing, raising or inquiring with two no-trump?

Blunderbuss, Atlanta, Ga.

I don’t think my side can make game here, but I have enough values to expect the opponents not to make game anywhere, either. The choice is to raise to three diamonds at once (maybe that will draw my opponents in) or to pass and bid up to three diamonds if necessary. Either approach makes sense — I think I favor the latter, but it is close.


For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Saturday, October 12th, 2019

The world’s a scene of changes; and to be Constant, in Nature were inconstancy.

Abraham Cowley


S North
None ♠ 8 5
 A 4 2
 A K J 8 5 2
♣ 5 4
West East
♠ Q 10 7 2
 K 10 3
 Q 7 6
♣ Q 10 3
♠ K J 9 6 4
 9 6 5
 10
♣ 9 8 7 2
South
♠ A 3
 Q J 8 7
 9 4 3
♣ A K J 6
South West North East
1 NT Pass 3 NT All pass
       

♠2

The mathematical odds when missing four cards to the queen are to play for the drop, but the percentages are close enough that almost anything could influence the play.

In today’s deal, declarer opened a strong no-trump and was raised immediately to game since North had no reason to explore for any other contract. Life would have been easy on any lead but a spade, but when West led a fourth-highest spade two, declarer realized he needed to guess diamonds to have any realistic chance to make his game.

He started by leading the diamond nine and put up dummy’s king, then crossed to the club ace and led a diamond toward dummy. When West followed small, South paused to reassess the evidence.

West had led his long suit against three no-trump, and the spade two suggested he had only four cards in the suit. Was it likely that he had a doubleton or three hearts? South decided that if East had five spades and West four, with no longer suit on the side, West was more likely to have started with three diamonds than two. So declarer took the diamond finesse and came home with ten tricks.

It is hard to argue with success, so I won’t! I will say that, as declarer, you should not automatically assume that the opening leader is short in a critical suit just because he made the opening lead. After all, he has to have a long suit somewhere! If he is known to have five or six cards in the long suit, that is a horse of a different color.



A disciplined pass is in order. If you could raise to two hearts, you would, but competing to the three-level is too much with a weak no-trump hand and bad trumps. To bid three hearts, you would have to be slightly less balanced. You shouldn’t miss anything by passing, as partner will surely act again if he has extras. Give me ace-jack-fourth of hearts instead of the spade ace, and I might break discipline, I admit.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ A 3
 J 8 7 2
 9 4 3
♣ A K J 6
South West North East
1 ♣ Pass 1 2 ♠
?      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Friday, October 11th, 2019

Throw away the dearest thing he owed As ’twere a careless trifle.

William Shakespeare


E North
Both ♠ 6 3 2
 A 7
 A K 5 4
♣ Q 9 4 2
West East
♠ 10 4
 J 6 5 4 2
 10 9 8 6
♣ K 5
♠ K Q J 8 7
 10 9 8
 Q J
♣ J 10 7
South
♠ A 9 5
 K Q 3
 7 3 2
♣ A 8 6 3
South West North East
      Pass
1 ♣ Pass 1 1 ♠
Pass Pass Dbl. Pass
1 NT Pass 3 NT All pass
       

♠10

When West led the spade 10 against three no-trump, it was ducked all around. Declarer won the spade continuation and dove into clubs. He could not afford to lose the lead to East, so one option was to cross to dummy and lead a club to the eight. That would keep East off play if he had precisely the doubleton king, but it would require him to hold a small club, not the jack or the 10. Worse, this line would provide only two tricks if West had kingthird, leaving declarer in a tight spot.

Declarer sensibly decided to play West for the club king, but when he cashed the club ace, West dropped the king! From then on, East could not be kept out of the lead, and declarer suffered a one-trick set.

South should have led a low club from hand, paying off to an unlikely singleton king on his right. It would do West no good to swoop in with the king, but if he played small, declarer would put up the queen. On the next round, East would have to contribute the jack — not the 10. South would then have to guess whether to win the ace, playing West for the three-card club holding, or duck, gaining on the actual layout. Knowing the spade position, declarer easily might have gone wrong.

Note that if South had held up the spade ace a second time, West would have been able to defeat the contract by force, by discarding the club king on the next spade (a far easier play to find with open cards than at the table).



All of our red-suit honors look horrible, and the lack of shape makes this a pass in any other position. However, in third seat, all that really matters is the quality of our spades. We should open one spade to get the lead in and to allow our partner to compete in the boss suit — though hopefully not too far. Some would even try pre-empting to two spades, which is not silly.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q J 8 7
 10 9 8
 Q J
♣ J 10 7
South West North East
    Pass Pass
?      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Thursday, October 10th, 2019

Never before have so many people understood so little about so much.

James Burke


S North
None ♠ Q 10 7 5
 A 10 7 4 2
 Q
♣ 9 7 2
West East
♠ J 9 8 4
 Q
 J 8 7 3
♣ K 10 8 3
♠ 6 2
 K 8 5 3
 A 10 9 6
♣ Q J 5
South
♠ A K 3
 J 9 6
 K 5 4 2
♣ A 6 4
South West North East
1 NT Pass 2 * Pass
2 Pass 2 ♠ Pass
4 All pass    

*Transfer to hearts

3

Faced with settling for partscore via Stayman or inviting game with a transfer followed by two spades, North chose the latter. South closed his eyes and drove to four hearts.

East won the low diamond lead with the ace and shifted to the club queen, wisely ducked by South to cut the defenders’ communications. South won the club jack continuation, pitched a club on the diamond king and advanced the heart nine to the queen and ace (better than low to the 10, which would lose to East’s singleton honor).

When declarer called for a small heart from the board and East followed small, South had a tough decision. He did not believe West would have covered with the queen from queen-doubleton, since it might solve declarer’s guess.

Accordingly, South had to choose between West’s holding K-Q-8 and a singleton. Deciding that West might not cover with the former — as it might spare declarer a guess or crash East’s singleton jack — declarer inserted the heart six.

When West discarded, that was one hurdle crossed, but South still had to negotiate the spades. South knocked out the heart king, won East’s trump return in dummy and crossed to hand with a spade to ruff a club. After confirming the 4-3 split, declarer played a spade back to the king and advanced the spade three.

Since the opening lead appeared to have been from four, East had started with three clubs and four cards in each red suit, thus only two spades. So declarer finessed the spade 10 and made his game.



With four-card support, a source of tricks and shortness, you have too much for a simple raise to two spades. An invitational three spades seems closer to the mark than a drive to game. While partner may not evaluate his hand properly, it might not be critical. It will not be terrible if partner thinks the diamond king is working; at the very least, it will provide a slow trick opposite our queen.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ Q 10 7 5
 A 10 7 4 2
 Q
♣ 9 7 2
South West North East
    1 ♠ Pass
?      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Wednesday, October 9th, 2019

For fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

Alexander Pope


S North
Both ♠ Q 8 2
 Q J
 A J 4
♣ A 10 9 8 7
West East
♠ K 4 3
 K 10 9 8 3
 K Q 6 5
♣ 2
♠ J 10 9 7
 6 4 2
 3 2
♣ Q J 6 4
South
♠ A 6 5
 A 7 5
 10 9 8 7
♣ K 5 3
South West North East
Pass 1 Dbl. Pass
2 NT Pass 3 NT All pass
       

10

West’s heart sequence persuaded him to lead the 10 against the no-trump game, and on winning in dummy, declarer could count six top tricks. Two more would be available on a normal club split and another via the double diamond finesse. However, he saw he might need to knock out West’s late entry before the hearts were set up.

One option was to cross to the club king and run the diamond seven. Should that lose, declarer could duck the second heart, win the third and play a club to the eight, an avoidance play against West. But that would not work well if West had both club honors, or if he had a singleton.

Realizing that he could keep West off lead in diamonds if East had one of the honors, declarer started on the clubs, taking the percentage play of running dummy’s club 10. This line would lose to a singleton honor in West, but that seemed less likely than a small singleton or void. When the club 10 held, South led a club to the jack and king, West throwing a spade. With three club tricks in the bag, declarer switched to diamonds, leading the 10. Seeing West split his honors, declarer took the ace and continued with the diamond jack.

West could do no better than win the third diamond and play the heart king to pin the queen. To add insult to injury, South won and took his club and diamond winners, then threw West in with a heart to concede the last two tricks in spades.



Raise to two spades at once. You can’t go wrong by limiting your hand and simultaneously supporting your partner. Not only might you end up in the wrong part-score if you rebid two diamonds, but you might also miss a game if partner has a distributional hand with five spades and no support for your suits. You may also get too high if you don’t put the brakes on sooner rather than later.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K 4 3
 K 10 9 6 3
 K Q 6 5
♣ 2
South West North East
1 Pass 1 ♠ Pass
?      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Tuesday, October 8th, 2019

I’m tired of Love: I’m still more tired of Rhyme. But Money gives me pleasure all the time.

Hilaire Belloc


E North
None ♠ A 2
 Q J 9 4 3
 A 8 4
♣ K 9 3
West East
♠ Q J 6 3
 10 8 5
 Q 5 3
♣ 10 6 4
♠ 9
 A K 7 6
 J 10 9 2
♣ A 8 7 2
South
♠ K 10 8 7 5 4
 2
 K 7 6
♣ Q J 5
South West North East
      1 ♣
1 ♠ Pass 2 ♣ Pass
2 ♠ Pass 3 NT Pass
4 ♠ All pass    

♣4

When South overcalled, North elected to offer three no-trump rather than driving there directly, and South’s sixth spade persuaded him to revert to spades.

East won West’s club lead with the ace and shifted to the diamond jack, suggesting he would have most of the remaining high cards, so South won his diamond king and led a low heart. West followed low, and declarer finessed the heart nine. East deceptively took the heart ace and pressed on with the diamond 10 to dummy’s ace, but declarer now had little choice but to run the heart queen. East followed low smoothly, and declarer discarded his diamond loser.

Declarer next focused on trumps. 10 tricks would be trivial if trumps broke, but if they were 4-1, declarer probably needed to find West with a significant singleton.

South saw an extra chance, though. Instead of blithely cashing the spade ace, he crossed to hand with a club and advanced the spade 10. If West had followed with the nine or an honor, he would have taken dummy’s ace and tried a finesse on the way back. As it was, when West produced a small card, South let the 10 run.

He knew that if East won the trick, he could not give his partner a trump promotion; as it was, when the nine appeared, declarer had held his losses in trumps to one trick.

If East had covered the second heart, declarer probably would have been unable to make this maneuver in trumps safely, because of the risk of a trump promotion.



There are three sensible policies that five-cardmajor adherents can follow here. They can open one of a minor and rebid one no-trump over one spade, or open one diamond and rebid two clubs over one spade. With most of my points in hearts, I tend to open my better minor and rebid one no-trump. Here, I would bid one club.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ 9
 A K 7 6
 J 10 9 2
♣ A 8 7 2
South West North East
      Pass
?      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Monday, October 7th, 2019

As soon as he saw the Big Boots, Pooh knew that an Adventure was about to happen, and he brushed the honey off his nose with the back of his paw, and spruced himself up as well as he could, so as to look Ready for Anything.

A.A. Milne


N North
E-W ♠ A 7 4 2
 —
 A K J 10 2
♣ A 9 6 2
West East
♠ Q J 10 9 5
 A K J 6
 9 4
♣ 10 5
♠ K 8 6
 9 4
 8 6
♣ K Q J 8 7 3
South
♠ 3
 Q 10 8 7 5 3 2
 Q 7 5 3
♣ 4
South West North East
    1 2 ♣
4 Dbl. All pass  

♠Q

This week, we will be focusing on subtle suit combinations. Knowing how to play certain suits in isolation is only half the battle, though. Being able to make the best play in the context of the whole hand is key.

South took a unilateral shot when he jumped to four hearts. West licked his lips and doubled, then led the spade queen. Declarer could see three likely top losers in trumps. In order to avoid a fourth, he needed some luck in hearts.

Hoping to prevent the defenders from scoring a spade ruff with a high trump, declarer crossed to hand with a diamond at trick two, after winning the spade ace. This was relatively safe because if diamonds were 3-1, the defense could probably arrange a ruff in their own time. Declarer next led the heart queen from hand. This gave him an extra chance in addition to 3-3 hearts — that of finding a defender with the doubleton nine. Any honor-doubleton holding without the nine would not help.

West took the first trump and continued spades. South ruffed and led the heart 10, crushing the nine. West pressed on with another spade; declarer ruffed and continued with the heart seven. West won and put a fourth spade on the table, but declarer ruffed again, cashed the heart eight, felling the six, then claimed the rest.

Ruffing a black suit to hand at trick two would have given West trump control, as declarer would have been forced to ruff four times.



You should try to establish tricks for partner in the minors, but which one? It may be best to take the heart king first, retaining the lead to switch through dummy at trick two. You might not get in again, after all, and hopefully you will know what to do after a look at dummy. Note: Partner might have bid a minor at his second turn if he had known what the best defense was.

LEAD WITH THE ACES

♠ 9 7
 K 9 4
 J 10 8 6 3 2
♣ 10 9
South West North East
Pass Pass 1 1 ♠
2 3 4 4 ♠
Pass Pass Dbl. All pass
       

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Sunday, October 6th, 2019

How should I value 10s and five-card suits in deciding whether to upgrade my hand into or out of a one no-trump opener, but also in deciding whether to open 11-counts at all?

Princess Pushy, Panama City, Fla.

Never upgrade a 4-3-3-3 hand. Consider adding a point when opening one no-trump (and especially when responding to one no-trump with a five-card suit that includes a top honor and decent intermediates — you will know them when you see them). When considering opening a suit, 5-4 shape is worth an extra point, but not if it means you can’t easily introduce your four-card suit at your next turn.

What would you bid with this hand: ♠ 6-2,  J-9-2,  A-Q-10-4-3, ♣ Q-7-4, when, as a passed hand, you hear one spade to your left, three hearts from partner (intermediate) and three spades to your right? Do you have enough to bid here?

Silent Sam, Honolulu, Hawaii

I would bid — but I would not raise to four hearts. As a passed hand, I can bid four diamonds, a natural call, but one that promises support for hearts. This gets my partner off to my preferred lead against four spades if the opponents decide to bid on over our four-heart contract. The chance that we get doubled here is smaller than that this is the key lead for the defense.

Please compare the merits of leading second-highest from bad suits against leading fourth-highest, or third-and-lowest. Can you combine the two methods?

Bats in the Belfry, Elkhart, Ind.

Third-and-lowest can never sensibly be combined with second-highest leads. If you must lead a card from three or four small to deny an honor in a suit where you’ve shown length, make it the top card. As long as you don’t lead MUD (middle-updown) from three cards against suits, any lead method is fine by me. At no-trump, leading second from four may be sensible, but be aware that partner will not always be able to read it.

I found myself in second seat, holding ♠ K-9-7-2,  A-K-8-3,  9-6-4, ♣ K-10, and I elected to double a one-diamond opening bid. I heard one heart to my left and two clubs from my partner. Was I wrong to try to improve the contract by bidding two no-trump? I did not achieve my target!

Barnacle Bill, Doylestown, Pa.

The main focus of a double of a minor is suitability for the unbid majors, with opening values. If you do not have three or more cards in both majors, you will always deliver real extras. When balanced, pass with a minimum opener and unsuitable shape, if overcalling on a chunky four-card suit at the one-level doesn’t feel right. Here, double was a good gamble, but you lost out. Do not bid on and make it worse.

Where can I learn about advanced card play concepts such as squeezes?

Trumpet Major, Bennington, Vt.

I would strongly advise you to focus on drawing trumps, taking finesses and cashing winners, and to ignore more complex concepts. Even at the top level, most errors fall into one of these categories. “Squeezes Made Simple” by Marc Smith and David Bird might help — or make things much worse.


For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Saturday, October 5th, 2019

Nothing is so good as it seems beforehand.

George Eliot


S North
E-W ♠ J 10 6 5
 10 4
 6 5
♣ A 10 9 7 4
West East
♠ 3
 A K 9 8 3
 Q 10 8 2
♣ K Q 2
♠ 8 7 4 2
 Q 7 5 2
 4
♣ J 8 6 3
South
♠ A K Q 9
 J 6
 A K J 9 7 3
♣ 5
South West North East
1 1 Dbl. 3
4 ♠ All pass    

K

A little learning is a dangerous thing, they say. Consider this deal from a knockout match, where the defense against four spades at both tables began in the same way: West cashed both top hearts and shifted to the club king, taken by the ace.

At the first table, declarer took the diamond ace, then led the trump nine to dummy’s 10 to play a diamond toward his hand, in case East wanted to ruff in from out of nowhere.

When East discarded a club, South won with the ace. After ruffing a diamond with the trump jack, declarer returned to hand with a trump to ruff a second diamond in dummy. When East discarded a heart, declarer could now make only his two remaining trumps — he had lost trump control when he ruffed a club back to hand.

At the other table, declarer also led a diamond to the ace at trick four. However, instead of playing a trump, declarer tried to cash the diamond king. East ruffed and played a club. Declarer ruffed this with the trump nine, then ruffed a diamond in dummy with the spade 10. Next, declarer returned to his hand via a low trump to the queen to ruff a diamond with the jack, thereby establishing two long diamond tricks.

Declarer still had a trump left with which to return to hand. He drew the remaining defensive trumps with the ace and king, then claimed the rest of the tricks. He had made four trumps, three diamonds, two diamond ruffs and the club ace for a total of 10 tricks.



Here your first bid of one heart was fine, though with an extra queen, a call of one spade — planning to compete in hearts next — would have been right. On your actual auction, some people quite sensibly play a “next-step negative,” also called a Herbert negative, after the cuebid. If you can’t bid two diamonds to show this hand, you have to bid two hearts now, since two spades would show 5-9 or so.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ 8 7 4 2
 Q 7 5 2
 4
♣ J 8 6 3
South West North East
  1 ♣ Dbl. Pass
1 Pass 2 ♣ Pass
?      

For details of Bobby Wolff’s autobiography, The Lone Wolff, contact [email protected]. If you would like to contact Bobby Wolff, please leave a comment at this blog.
Reproduced with permission of United Feature Syndicate, Inc., Copyright 2019. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].