Aces on Bridge — Daily Columns

The Aces on Bridge: Thursday, June 6th, 2019

Great contest follows, and much learned dust
Involves the combatants; each claiming truth,
And truth disclaiming both.

William Cowper


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

*Spades

8

At the Dyspeptics Club, the rivalries are more than about winning and losing, since there is an unspoken contest between North and East, each of whom considers himself far superior to the other.

While neither of them would consider criticizing the other directly (as opposed to eviscerating their hapless partners) when the opportunity arises, a cryptic aside can turn the knife just as sharply as a direct criticism.

Today’s deal gave North the opportunity to add insult to injury after an unsophisticated auction had led South to a marginal six spades. When East competed over North’s transfer bid, you can hardly blame South for joining in, and that led North to something of an overbid when he took control and drove to slam.

West led the heart eight to East’s ace, and when that player returned a trump, declarer could simply draw trumps and claim, disposing of both dummy’s diamonds on the winning hearts.

While South was waiting for his partner to acknowledge the brilliance of his play, North turned sympathetically to East and commented on what a difficult opportunity he had missed. Stung, East asked what North meant. Can you see the answer?

West’s spot-card lead had to be from shortage, so taking the heart ace was virtually conceding defeat. The only real chance was that partner would hold the diamond king, so East should have followed at trick one with the heart jack.

Declarer will not lose a heart trick now, but he will have two inescapable losers in diamonds!



Since two hearts by you would be natural and forcing, a jump to three hearts sets diamonds and show shortage. That is sensible, but you might now miss a 6-2 spade fit. It is far from clear that the alternative of a three-club call would see your partner support spades with a doubleton. So maybe the splinter is best, since otherwise partner may be focused too much on no-trump with no spade fit.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q 9 5 4 3
 9
 A 7 4
♣ A J 10
South West North East
    1 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].

The Aces on Bridge: Wednesday, June 5th, 2019

A place for everything and everything in its place.

English proverb


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

K

Declarer in today’s deal from the Common Game played three spades competently. Clubs were originally 3-3, so South could eliminate that suit and endplay the defenders with the third trump to hold his diamond losers to one. However, I have changed the layout in the minors to make the task for declarer more challenging.

The defense begins with two top hearts followed by a shift to the club jack. Declarer takes the club in hand and cashes both top spades, then runs the club winners as West discards a heart. When South leads the fourth club, planning to ruff this in dummy, West must pitch a heart. Otherwise, declarer can set up diamonds easily enough for one loser. So West pitches a second heart, and, after ruffing the club in dummy, South exits from the North hand with a trump to East’s queen. What four cards does West come down to now?

If he comes down to one heart and three diamonds, then East can do no better than lead a heart, and declarer discards a diamond to endplay West to lead away from the diamond king or East from the jack.

But if West pitches a diamond, to come down to two diamonds and two hearts, declarer ruffs the third round of hearts and leads a diamond to the 10 and jack. East has only diamonds left, so he leads one, and South plays low from hand. When the king pops up, declarer has the last two tricks.

This line may require playing East for the diamond jack, against perfect defense.



This is a take-out double — effectively Stayman, but you can pass with the right hand, of course. Not this hand, though — you should simply show your spades by bidding two spades, and let partner take it from there. In this position, you have defined your values accurately already, so partner is in charge.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ A K 4 3
 J 7
 A 10 7 5
♣ A 4 3
South West North East
  Pass Pass 1 ♣
1 NT 2 ♣ Dbl. 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, June 4th, 2019

A man wants no protection when his conduct is strictly right.

Lord Mansfield


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

*Two key-cards, no trump queen

10

Bidding over pre-empts is more about judgment than science. Here, South should not double a three-diamond pre-empt, since he cannot stand to have partner bid spades at just about any level.

When North raises to four diamonds, suggesting at least a good high-card raise to four hearts, South might stretch just a little and use key-card, hoping his extra shape in the side suits will come in handy, as indeed it will.

After the lead of the diamond 10, declarer should not put up the diamond queen, since doing so might provide the defenders with some communications. He will win the first diamond in hand and lay down the heart ace, then draw trumps and pitch his diamond loser on dummy’s good spade. Now he can ruff a diamond to hand and reach a five-card ending where he has four clubs and a trump in each hand. Can you see what he should do next?

If clubs are 3-2, the hand is cold for 12 tricks. If clubs don’t break, then declarer cannot protect himself against West having begun with all of the four significant spot cards. But he can guard against East having a singleton intermediate or honor in clubs by leading a small club from hand and playing low from dummy, no matter what West plays. In the layout shown, if West plays low, then East will win his 10 and be forced to surrender a ruff-sluff. If West plays high on the first club, he is left on lead; now, whether he plays a high club or a low one, declarer is home.



While it is rarely correct to pass with good shape and moderate values at your first turn, it is often correct to pass with good values but no shape when it seems to be the opponents’ hand. Here, with only one of the unbid suits, you can neither overcall nor double unless you can judge from the auction that partner must have values. That clearly isn’t the case yet, so pass and stay out of trouble.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q 3
 K 10 6 2
 Q 3
♣ A 8 6 2
South West North East
  1 ♣ Pass 1 ♠
?      

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, June 3rd, 2019

It is better to be able neither to read nor write than to be able to do nothing else.

William Hazlitt


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

♣3

West leads the club three against four spades, and South can see that he must expect to lose a club. He can discard one of his hearts on a club and ruff his other losing heart with one of dummy’s small trumps. He should then be in good shape to hold his spade losers to two at most.

When East wins the ace, South drops the king from hand to create an entry to dummy. That will allow him to win the next club in dummy rather than in his own hand.

East returns a low spade, and South can afford to put in the jack, since he needs only one trump in dummy to ruff with. When West wins trick two with the spade queen and returns a diamond, South wins dummy’s king rather than risking the finesse. South also cannot afford to take another trump finesse immediately, since West might be able to win and return a third trump to keep South from ruffing his losing heart at all.

To avoid this fate, now is the right moment to take the spade ace, then cash the two club winners in dummy so that South can get rid of one of his losing hearts. Next, declarer cashes the two top hearts and ruffs the fourth heart with dummy’s seven. Though East is out of hearts, he cannot over-ruff, and even if he could, it would be with the master trump.

Only now can South afford to resume the play of trumps. He concedes one trick to the defenders’ master trump but makes his contract.



It seems obvious to lead a heart, playing to force declarer. I would do that, but I can see a good case for a small trump. Dummy probably has a ruffing value, and it could easily be in hearts. I might be able to kill the ruff by repeated trump leads, so a low trump would be my second choice.

LEAD WITH THE ACES

♠ K 8 6 4 3
 10 5 2
 A J 3
♣ 7 5
South West North East
    2 2 ♠
Pass 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, June 2nd, 2019

I’ve been reading your columns to try to learn a little about the game of bridge. I am thinking of trying a book that will teach me the basics. I’d like to learn, but I want to read up a little before starting completely cold.

Novelty Gifts, Holland, Mich.

You could try a big bridge bookseller like Baron Barclay (www. baronbarclay.com/contact.html or by telephone at 1-800-274-2221). They will know just what you need. If you want to try a bridge computer program, the ACBL at www.acbl.org/learn_page/ is a good place to start.

When you hear your right-hand opponent open one diamond, what should be your policy about overcalling on a 5-5 hand with one good suit and one bad? I had ♠ J-9-8-4-3,  A-2,  10, ♣ A-Q-6-5-4. The clubs are the suit you want partner to lead, but if you bid them first, you may lose the spades altogether.

Quality Street, New Smyrna Beach, Fla.

These days, it is almost mandatory to play some form of two-suited overcalls, focusing on the majors, while the unusual no-trump allows you to bid club or heart two-suiters. But if you have the wrong two-suiter for a Michaels Cue-bid or Unusual No-trump, just bid spades and let the chips fall where they may. There may be time for clubs later.

In a recent question, one hand heard one club to his left, and one heart from his partner. He bid one no-trump and then heard his partner bid the opponent’s suit. If the first call of one no-trump shows a club stopper, doesn’t your partner’s second call show a genuine club suit rather than being an artificial cue-bid?

Jake the Fake, Chicago, Ill.

Many bridge players normally make the assumption that you cannot play in the opponents’ suit, unless you have a specific agreement that such a call is natural. That rule applies here: A two-club call simply shows a good hand. It sounds as if your partner is looking for heart support or maybe a four-card spade suit. I’d say if and only if the one-club opener is two or more cards, then you can bid the suit naturally at your first or second turn.

When a partnership has advanced to the four-level and slam may be in the picture, how can you let your partner know you want to stop at four no-trump and are not asking for aces?

Nervous Breakdown, Vancouver, Wash.

Four no-trump is normally Blackwood. A common exception is when the last call of the four-no-trump bidder was in no-trump, and no major fit exists. Similarly, when no fit has been found, then if the previous call was a cue-bid or fourth suit, a jump to four no-trump should be quantitative and invitational. Furthermore, after Stayman, you can often set the bid major as trump; if so, a jump to four no-trump should be quantitative.

Our excellent bridge club has superb players and pairs who frequently score high, plus a middle group and a bottom third, all in the open game. More often than I would expect, dark horse pairs in the bottom third come in top or close to it. Since bridge is significantly a game of skill, how is it that the less-skilled do well more often than expected?

I Am Curious Green, Dallas, Texas

I’m not sure how to answer, but you could reasonably think of the results of an event as a normal curve. Luck is never eliminated entirely from bridge (we need our opponents not to be perfect), so my experience at the local club has been that anything can happen. At higher levels, there are far fewer presents for everyone, so your mistakes tend to be really expensive.

I am often torn as opener about taking a second call in competition when holding extra shape but minimum high cards. Specifically, I was recently faced with this problem when I held ♠ Q-3,  Q-7-4,  A-Q-9-7-6-2, ♣ K-3. I opened one diamond and heard one heart to my left, one spade from partner and two hearts to my right. Should I pass or bid three diamonds now?

Humble Pie, Muncie. Ind.

This 13-count is poorly put together with wasted heart cards. If partner is short in hearts, he will almost certainly act again, assuming he has the other high cards. So I would pass now, but I would be much more tempted to bid again with three small hearts and, say, ace-king-jack-sixth of diamonds.


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, June 1st, 2019

No one thinks of winter when the grass is green!

Rudyard Kipling


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

5

When you reach the normal contract of four spades, you have been warned that diamonds may not break, but at least the shortage will be in the right place. After the diamond five is led, you capture East’s queen with your ace. How should you continue?

The best chance seemed to be finding the heart ace with West, or perhaps the spade king with East. So you lead a heart at trick two, which goes to the king and ace. Back comes the spade two, and now you must revise your plan. Be warned: the answer isn’t easy! The point is that if you ruff two diamonds in dummy, West may score two trump tricks, and you will still have a diamond loser left.

The best line is to win the spade ace, then lead a club to the ace and ruff a club. Trump a diamond in dummy and ruff another club to hand. At this point, you lead one more diamond, and West can do no better than throw a heart. You ruff yet another club to establish dummy’s fifth club, and when West follows, that marks him with an original 3=4=2=4 shape.

You can now endplay West by leading the spade queen, throwing a low heart from table. (If you lead the spade nine, then West might meanly hop up with the king and exit with the spade 10, leaving you with two diamond losers.)

Note that as the cards lie, West can take your spade queen with his king and cash the spade 10. However, he must then lead a heart to dummy’s king, after which the club 10 is the game-going trick.



Double here would be takeout, maybe suggesting tolerance for partner’s suit — the same hand with a second spade instead of a small card in either minor would be perfect for that call. Instead, should you bid two diamonds because of your suit disparities, or double and rely on getting to the right strain? I think I’d bid two diamonds, expecting to get to the right major suit if partner doesn’t fit diamonds.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ 2
 A 10 9 7
 K Q 10 8 4
♣ Q 6 3
South West North East
  1 ♣ 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, May 31st, 2019

There are dark shadows on the Earth, but its lights are stronger in the contrast.

Charles Dickens


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

Q

When this deal came up, two declarers were confronted with the same defense but drew two different conclusions from their opponents’ play.

At both tables, after the lead of the heart queen to the king and ace, each defender accurately shifted to the club king to try to set up tricks in that suit. At the first table, declarer won his ace and played a low spade to the king. When East discarded a diamond, declarer unblocked diamonds, then played a heart. However, West could now maneuver to score two trump tricks and a club.

At the second table, declarer read the lead as a singleton and asked himself why East had not played for heart ruffs. South concluded that West probably had a trump trick, and that East believed he needed more than just one heart ruff to beat the contract.

So, at trick three, South led the trump jack from hand and let it run when West played low. Then declarer took the trump ace and king before playing a low heart to the jack. Had West overtrumped to lead two rounds of clubs, declarer would have ruffed out the hearts, using the diamond king as a re-entry to dummy. So West discarded a club instead. Now declarer returned to dummy with the diamond king to run the heart nine, covered with the 10 and ruffed in hand.

West did his best by over-ruffing with the queen to cash a club, but declarer had the rest. He made four trumps, two hearts, two diamonds, the club ace and a club ruff.



It feels right to give delayed support to two hearts now. This is not only because you don’t want to give up entirely on a chance at game, but also because if your partner has a singleton spade, you might be able to use a trump in dummy to cope with a fourth-round minor-suit loser.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ J 10 6 4 3
 J 4
 A 5 4
♣ A 10 4
South West North East
Pass 1 ♣ 1 Pass
1 ♠ Pass 1 NT 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, May 30th, 2019

Time goes, you say? Ah, no! Alas, Time stays, we go.

Austin Dobson


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

9

Today’s deal comes from the semifinals of the Australian National Open Teams; it is the flip-side of yesterday’s deal. We had pointed out that declarer’s false-cards will occasionally rebound. But the advantage of these maneuvers is that fooling your partner does no harm when he is dummy.

Frequently, you want to prevent an opponent reading from his partner’s lead as a singleton and giving him a ruff. But occasionally, it is in your interest not to falsecard, as here.

Jacek Pszczola, known to the world at large as Pepsi, over-called four spades over an off-center three-diamond pre-empt. When West led the diamond nine, Pepsi played low from dummy; East put up his ace and saw the two from South.

East could read that his partner had led a singleton, so he returned a diamond, and West ruffed. Back came a heart, which Pepsi took with his ace. He cashed his two top trumps, then crossed to the club ace to dispose of his heart loser on a diamond winner. West could ruff in with his master trump, but declarer had the rest.

At the second table, West also led his singleton diamond against four spades, but this time declarer dropped his jack under the ace. Jacek Kalita, as East, was in the hot seat, and he could not read whether the lead was a singleton or doubleton. But he could see that his side needed to set up heart winners. So, he shifted accurately to a low heart at trick two, and now the contract could no longer be made.



It must be right to raise hearts at once; otherwise, we may have to do so at an inconvenient level, or not do it at all. That said, a simple raise to two hearts covers a wide variety of hands. It would be convenient to have both a constructive and a minimum raise, as we would if the opponents had stayed silent. Some use a two-club call for a constructive three-card raise; that would be ideal here.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ Q J 8 3
 Q 5 3
 9
♣ Q J 7 5 3
South West North East
    1 Dbl.
?      

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, May 29th, 2019

Man, who wert once a despot and a slave;
A dupe and a deceiver; a decay;
A traveler from the cradle to the grave
Through the dim light of this immortal day.

Percy Shelley


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

3

The art of falsecarding is a complex one; it is generally a good rule as declarer to conceal small cards in the suit led to make the defenders’ task of reading leads and signals more difficult. But you should not do this entirely at random; sometimes you make the defenders’ task easier, not harder.

For example, in this deal from Masterplay (also known as the Expert Game) by Terence Reese, a false-card by the declarer was the clue to the defense.

West kicked off with the heart three against three no-trump. While some prefer to lead second highest rather than a low card from four small, leading fourth best was certainly reasonable. Declarer played the heart two from dummy, East played the heart king, and South dropped the heart nine.

South’s idea was to make the opponents think that he was short in hearts and to encourage a heart continuation. In fact, the play conveyed a completely different impression. East could tell from the lead of the heart three, with the heart two in dummy, that West had only four hearts. Therefore, South’s play of the heart nine had to be a false-card, and the inference to be drawn was that declarer was well upholstered in that suit.

So, East switched to a low diamond, playing his partner for the diamond jack. This play did the trick. When West came in with the spade king, he was able to return a diamond to his partner’s A-10 for the defense’s fifth winner.



Nothing in bridge is ever simple or unanimous, but I believe the majority of people would expect that if South had reversing values together with four diamonds and five clubs, he would jump to three diamonds now. Therefore, a call of two diamonds suggests this minor-suit pattern without real extras, making it an ideal bid here.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ J 10
 J 2
 K Q 8 7
♣ A Q 9 8 4
South West North East
1 ♣ 1 Dbl. 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, May 28th, 2019

Is not life a hundred times too short for us — to bore ourselves?

Friedrich Nietzsche


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

*Drury, a maximum pass with
  spade support

10

After North’s Drury two club response to show a maximum pass with fit, South checked for key cards, then bid the spade slam.

West’s lead of the diamond 10 went to dummy’s ace. Declarer needed to hold his losers in the black suits to one, but had to decide which black suit to play first. In these positions, it is sometimes right to go after the side suit first, but here South advanced the trump jack and let it run when East played low. West’s discard of a low heart gave declarer pause. Can you see a good plan for him now?

Declarer’s solution was to throw a club on the diamond ace, then to lead out dummy’s trump 10, covered by the king and ace. Next, he put the club jack on the table — a move that would guarantee the contract as long as East had at least two clubs.

As the cards lay, the defense had no answer to this line of play. If West took the trick with the club queen, declarer would use dummy’s club 10 as an entry to pick up East’s remaining trumps. He would end up with six trumps, a heart, two diamonds and three clubs.

At the table, West allowed the club jack to hold the trick. Declarer continued by cashing the club ace, then ruffing the club eight in dummy. East overruffed this with the seven, but that was the only trick the defense made. Declarer ruffed the return of the diamond queen and drew East’s remaining trump with the ace, after which his hand was high.



Your partner must be weak and unbalanced, since he surely has six clubs but chose not to repeat the suit at his second turn, and then he ran from one no-trump. I’d guess he has one spade and is maybe 4-6 in the minors with 11-12 points. You have no fit, no sure defensive tricks and no reason to think you can beat two spades. Go quietly and pass.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K 9 7 4
 K J 8 6
 Q 6 3
♣ 5 2
South West North East
    1 ♣ Pass
1 1 ♠ Pass Pass
1 NT Pass 2 ♣ 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].