Aces on Bridge — Daily Columns

The Aces on Bridge: Tuesday, April 10th, 2018

Be through my lips to unawakened Earth
The trumpet of a prophecy! O wind,
If winter comes, can spring be far behind?

Percy Bysshe Shelley


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

*Hearts

10

All the deals this week come from the Gold Coast tournament in Brisbane, one of the most enjoyable week-long events on the bridge calendar. If you like sun, sea and sand, together with great restaurants and a serious bridge tournament where you can still have fun, this is for you.

This deal came up in the Ivy Dahler Swiss Pairs, a one-day tournament run along Swiss lines, where the top pairs are lined up against one another in eight-board matches, with a format akin to a Swiss teams event.

JoAnn Sprung of Las Vegas — half of the winning pair with husband Danny — declared four hearts as South here, after a transfer response to her one-club opening bid. The lead of the diamond 10 went to the jack, queen and king. Declarer knocked out the heart ace, won the return of the diamond nine, then drew two more rounds of trumps ending in hand.

At this point, Sprung had decided that East’s initial pass meant West was heavily favored to have both the missing aces. A club toward the king required West to duck (or give declarer an extra discard). When the club king won, South could pitch her club 10 on the diamond ace, and now a club lead went to the queen and ace, leaving West on lead.

It did not matter what West did now; she could concede a ruff-and-discard by leading a club, or open up the spades, allowing declarer to play the suit for one loser. Either way, the game would come home.


This unusual auction by your partner describes a hand with a maximum and three hearts, plus a source of tricks in clubs, hoping for you to have a hand with some slam interest. You do not have that hand, so sign off in four hearts. Imagine the heart three were the queen, and you might do more.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ Q 10 9
 J 10 8 4 3
 A J 5
♣ K 7
South West North East
    1 NT Pass
2 Pass 2 Pass
3 NT Pass 4 ♣ 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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Monday, April 9th, 2018

When vain desire at last and vain regret
  Go hand in hand to death and all is vain,
  What shall assuage the unforgotten pain
And teach the unforgetful to forget?

Dante Gabriel Rossetti


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

2

All the deals this week come from last year’s Gold Coast tournament in Brisbane, Australia. Our first deal features a great rarity, where a director call cost 25 IMPs. Cometh the hour, cometh the hand …

Good news: You are in a grand slam. Bad news: They lead an ace in the suit where you have a singleton. Good news: The lead is out of turn! Do you call the director or accept the lead?

Before I give you the denouement, when Molly O’Donohue and Philip Thompson were North-South, they also bid to the delicate grand slam, but in clubs, on the auction shown.

Maybe West should have known not to lead spades — but surely the diamond ace was never going to get away! Be that as it may, while a heart lead might have been the killer for one side or the other, a diamond was led, and O’Donohue wrapped up 13 tricks.

Back to our director call, where our players are veiled in the concealing gauze of anonymity that only a willfully forgetful tournament director can provide. He was summoned to another table where (on an auction similar to the one shown) it was North at the helm in seven diamonds, after East had overcalled one spade. However, West led the spade king out of turn.

North was given his options and, rejecting Goldwater’s Rule (“If they don’t know whose lead it is, they are probably leading the wrong thing”), triumphantly banned the spade lead. So East led the heart ace and continued the suit, to cash out for down two.


I could imagine leading the diamond king, trying to cash two or three tricks in the suit on the go, but dummy rates to be relatively short in diamonds, so I might not accomplish much by this lead. An alternative approach, which I prefer, might be to lead trumps, hoping the hearts will not run for declarer, and that I can stop the cross-ruff.

LEAD WITH THE ACES

♠ 10 4 3
 J 5 3 2
 K 7
♣ Q 10 8 4
South West North East
  1 Pass 1 ♠
Pass 2 ♠ Pass 3 ♣
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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Sunday, April 8th, 2018

Holding ♠ A-9-3,  A-Q-4-2,  4, ♣ A-Q-7-3-2, I opened one club and raised the response of one heart to three. When my partner bid three spades, I cooperated with four clubs, and my partner now went back to four hearts. Should I have bid on — and if so, with what?

On My Uppers, Tucson, Ariz.

Your partner’s initial cue-bid promised at least slam interest (or else he would simply have signed off in game), but he rates to have no diamond control. Since you have diamonds controlled, I would trot out Blackwood, or Key-Card Blackwood if that is in your armory. Because your partner made a slam try, apparently without any aces, he is guaranteed to hold strong trumps.

At the start of play, what characteristics of either declarer’s or dummy’s hand might call your attention to the possibility of a squeeze?

Bridge Nut, Arlington, Texas

Typically, the possibilities for a squeeze exist when declarer arrives at a point where he has top winners, but slow rather than fast losers, and is one trick short of having the rest of the tricks. If you are simply missing an ace, you normally have to lose it. When you have all but one of the tricks in top winners, or can arrange to reach such a position, the possibility of legitimate (or illegitimate) pressure should be uppermost in your mind.

In New Minor (or checkback Stayman after opener’s rebid of one no-trump), can or should opener jump after his partner uses the relay? For example, with ♠ Q-10-2,  K-5,  A-8-7-3-2, ♣ K-10-4, if you rebid one no-trump after your partner’s one-spade response, might you jump to three spades over a two-club relay using two spades for a minimum hand with three spades?

Fine Weather Friend, Boise, Idaho

Absolutely yes. I often think that opener should take more advantage of the three-level responses, in some cases to show both minors when appropriate, but also to bid out hand pattern when he has had to rebid one no-trump with a singleton in partner’s suit.

I read your column online, and I am interested in how the expert players differ from us mortals. Do any of the top bridge players possess photographic memories?

Snapping Turtle, Cape Town, South Africa

I don’t know of any, but among past players, Oswald Jacoby had an eidetic memory, able to recall everything he saw, including bridge hands. Al Roth and Australian Tim Seres had similarly great recall, but there is also much to be said for the ability to forget every deal instantaneously once it is over. That way you focus on the new one with full concentration.

Holding ♠ K-2,  Q-7-2,  A-Q-9-8-4, ♣ Q-5-2, I opened one diamond, and my partner responded one heart. The next player bid two clubs, and I passed because although I might raise with three, I did not like my club or heart holding. My partner sold out (he had 4-4-3-2 pattern and eight points), and the opponents made two clubs when we could have made at least eight tricks in diamonds. Who, if anyone, was to blame?

Undercooked, Grand Junction, Colo.

If not playing support doubles — which I am lukewarm about — where your double would show three-card trump support, your action was surely correct. While you are allowed to raise with three trumps, I would need the heart jack to make that call. Conversely, your partner had just enough to bid over two clubs — the choice being between a take-out double or a raise to two diamonds. Neither is perfect, though, I admit.


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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Saturday, April 7th, 2018

Good luck in most cases comes through the misfortune of others.

Jackie Stewart


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

10

When West leads the heart 10 against four spades, the defenders have set up two heart winners for themselves in addition to their two diamond tricks. How should you plan the play as declarer?

There is no reason not to win the first trick with the heart ace, because ducking lessens the chance of an overtrick. Obviously, to have any chance of making 10 tricks, you need spades to be 3-2 with the trump queen onside. If clubs are 3-2 as well, then you will make 11 tricks. However, extra care may be needed if spades break and clubs do not.

After winning the heart ace at trick one, you should lead a low club to dummy’s king and continue with a low trump, finessing the jack when East plays low. Next, cash the trump king, and when everyone follows, you are almost home. However, instead of drawing the last trump, you should now cash the club queen. If both defenders follow, only then will you draw the last trump with dummy’s ace and claim 11 tricks.

On today’s layout, you are in luck when it is West who discards, having started with 2-1 in the black suits. You continue with a club to dummy’s ace in order to ruff a club and establish dummy’s eight as a winner. All that remains is to draw the last trump with dummy’s ace, and cash dummy’s long club.

Note that cashing the spade ace and king early is highly unlikely to work, since you need to get two losers away, not just one.


When your partner has two equivalent cue-bids available (two diamonds and two hearts), the higher cue-bid should show four trumps, and the lower should show three. It is technically possible that your partner has six diamonds here, but let’s not confuse “technically possible” with the more normal hand type we see here. I’d bid two spades since I have nothing to spare for my earlier action.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K J 8 5 3
 A 7 3
 Q 7
♣ Q 6 2
South West North East
  1 Pass 1
1 ♠ 2 ♣ 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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Friday, April 6th, 2018

Thus happiness depends, as Nature shows,
Less on exterior things than most suppose.

William Cowper


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

3

Deals from the Common Game are played virtually simultaneously across North America and provide a splendid opportunity to compare results from city to city or club to club. Today’s deal was a problem I was given from one of these tournaments, and it required some thought for me to come up with the winning line. See if you can find the optimum strategy to make six hearts when West meanly leads a trump.

It looks relatively clear to win the heart queen at the first trick, preserving dummy’s small hearts to ruff losers. Next, you cash the three top spades, pitching diamonds at every turn. Yes, if a defender ruffs in, your chances go up in smoke, but you are going to need some good news somewhere along the way, and spades will break in friendly fashion two times in three.

When the three top spades stand up, you play the club ace and ruff a club, lead a diamond to the ace and ruff a club, then ruff a diamond in hand and draw trumps, losing the last club trick to one defender or the other.

As you can see from the full layout, the real danger is a trump promotion for the defense in either clubs or diamonds. Specifically, the fourth round of spades or the third round of diamonds from East may promote a trump for West unless you are very careful in your choice of early discards.

For more information about the Common Game, visit thecommongame.com.


Your side does not appear to have an eight-card fit, and your partner surely rates to have a minimum opener, or he would have found a call at his second turn. While defending two clubs undoubled may not be your best possible score, it may well be the best result possible that you can achieve. So I would pass now.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ J 9 7 6
 8 6
 K J 3
♣ K Q 6 3
South West North East
  Pass 1 Pass
1 ♠ 2 ♣ 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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Thursday, April 5th, 2018

When I play with my cat, who knows whether she is amusing herself more with me than I am with her?

Montesquieu


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

♣Q

In today’s deal, South heard West pre-empt in clubs over his one-spade opener. Now, when North cue-bid four clubs, this was a forcing raise in spades but did not promise a club control. South signed off in game to end the auction. When West led the club queen, East won the ace. South could take the club return, draw trumps and ruff dummy’s last club in hand; but now what?

Either a good guess in diamonds or finding the heart queen onside would see declarer safely home. Or, if hearts broke 3-3, one of dummy’s diamonds could be discarded on the 13th heart.

Accordingly, South continued with a heart to the jack and queen. Back came a deceptive heart four, to West’s 10 and dummy’s king. Declarer could now have run the heart seven, playing East for a four-card suit. But West was perfectly capable of contributing the 10 from the 109. So eventually South played a heart to his ace, then guessed poorly by leading a diamond to the king and ace. Down one.

The diamond guess was unlucky, but declarer had missed a 100 percent line. After drawing trumps and eliminating clubs, he was right to play on hearts. But he should have covered the three with the seven to endplay East.

If a heart is returned, dummy’s jack and king can be cashed, and South re-enters his hand with a trump to discard a diamond on the heart ace. If West puts up the heart 10 at his first turn, dummy’s jack is played, and East is again forced to clear up the heart position.


Had your RHO not doubled, you would have bid two hearts, of course. So should you now ignore the likelihood that there is heart length on your right and make the two-heart bid anyway? I’m not sure of the answer here. I’d certainly bid a better heart suit, but that doesn’t feel necessary here. I think I would pass and await further developments.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q 5 3 2
 A 8 6 5
 10 4
♣ K 3
South West North East
1 ♠ Pass 1 NT 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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Wednesday, April 4th, 2018

many languages
fly around the world
producing sparks when they collide
sometimes of hate
sometimes of love

Bei Dao


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

A

This month, I’ll be running a few more deals from Kit Woolsey’s excellent new book, “The Language of Bridge.” Woolsey’s book focuses on one of the most difficult areas of the game, communication between partners.

Almost all books for beginners and intermediates focus on the problem faced by the individual. But really, it is only declarer play that is an individual sport. Both bidding and defense do sometimes involve unilateral decisions, but more often, the partnership must make the decision together. Knowing when to help partner decide what to do, and when to make the decision single-handedly, is one of the great challenges of the game. Here, for example, you defend against four spades after your partner has opened a weak two-bid in hearts. You lead the heart ace and get to see dummy. When partner encourages with the 10, you have to plan the defense.

Partner is encouraging in hearts, but do you know what four tricks you will take to defeat the contract? The answer is that you must first cash your diamond ace. Then, even if partner encourages in diamonds (which he will do if he has the diamond king), you now play another heart. This sequence of plays should make it clear to partner — you hope — that you want a third round of hearts for a trump promotion. If you had not cashed your diamond ace, partner might have played a third round of hearts prematurely, allowing declarer to discard his singleton diamond and avoid the trump loser.


You described your hand perfectly at your first turn; if your partner wanted to play hearts, he would have passed when doubled. But he decided to run, and who are you to say that he is wrong? The optimal way to get to the better minor suit fit is to bid two no-trump and redouble if doubled. The additional bonus is that this way you ensure that your partner becomes declarer!

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ 4
 K J 10 8 5 4
 K 10 6
♣ 9 5 4
South West North East
      1 ♣
2 Pass Pass Dbl.
Pass Pass Rdbl. 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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Tuesday, April 3rd, 2018

Our ship of state, which recent storms have threatened to destroy, has come safely to harbor at last.

Sophocles


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

♠Q

Even if playing a 16-18 no-trump, many Norths would choose that opening call — inflation has set in at bridge as in all walks of life. Regardless, North-South will end up in three no-trump; but, as if to justify the upgrade, West holds a natural spade lead, and that puts the game in jeopardy.

Should South win or duck the opening lead? If he ducks, West continues with the spade jack, and declarer wins in dummy with the king. Declarer now leads a low diamond from dummy; when East takes his ace, he has no spade left to play, and whatever he shifts to will not cause declarer a problem. East will most probably try a heart. Declarer can win in his hand and knock out the diamond king, and can then easily win the rest of the tricks. (For the record, though, if spades had broken 4-3, the defenders could have scored only two tricks from each of the spade and diamond suits.)

There would have been a completely different outcome if declarer had taken the first spade trick. East would win the first diamond and would be able to lead his remaining spade. It would then be too late for declarer to hold up, for West would be able to win the second round of spades and continue with a third round. No matter what declarer did, West would set up the spades and regain the lead with the diamond king to cash out his spades and defeat the contract.


You have three plausible actions here. You can overcall one diamond, perhaps planning to double if the opponents agree a suit cheaply. You can double, making sure you find a major-suit fit cheaply, if you have one, and perhaps minimizing the risk for your side, while possibly missing no-trump. Or, my choice, you can overcall one no-trump — the path with the highest risk but largest reward.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K 9 5
 K Q 6
 Q J 10 7 3
♣ A 10
South West North East
      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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Monday, April 2nd, 2018

Laces for a lady; letters for a spy, Watch the wall my darling while the Gentlemen go by!

Rudyard Kipling


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

7

They say that the looker-on sees most of the game. As a kibitzer at my club, I often wonder whether the players consider the consequences of their actions. All too often, the board is completed and the players move on, blithely unaware of the opportunities missed and chances gone begging.

Today’s deal saw me as North, dummy, with the sort of hand that Terence Reese would have described as a king better than his usual rubber bridge collection. I transferred my partner into two spades, and West hit on the lead of the diamond seven, rather than the club eight. (The latter would have been my choice, if only because it might have been a little easier to read).

East won the diamond king and ace and pressed on with the diamond 10 — the best defense, though she announced afterward that she thought she was defending no-trump. South ruffed with the spade queen, and West over-ruffed and cashed the heart ace, then led a club. Declarer carefully won that in dummy to lead a spade toward the 10, and could no longer be prevented from making eight tricks.

As usual, no one said anything germane to best play and defense in the post mortem. My partner had played it nicely, but how would you comment on the defense?

West missed a trick when he over-ruffed the spade queen; if he had pitched a club, he could ensure that he either would get a club ruff or could ruff the fourth diamond with the spade nine once declarer was out of trumps.


Here your partner has doubled for take-out. You can simply bid either minor, but I’d suggest a call of two no-trump to show both minors. Since you did not bid two no-trump over two hearts, this should not be read as natural. The question is whether you should try for game by raising the Sminor selected by partner. You have just enough to do that if you believe partner has promised extras.

LEAD WITH THE ACES

♠ 10 2
 9 5
 Q 6 5 3
♣ A 10 7 5 3
South West North East
  1 Dbl. 2
Pass Pass 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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Sunday, April 1st, 2018

Please explain to a complete beginner why we are supposed to lead fourth highest from long suits. How does it gain, and what inferences can we draw from the small cards?

Gone to Grass, Union City, Tenn.

The answer comes in two parts, one of which is the rule of 11, which I’ll deal with in response to another letter later this month. You can often infer partner’s precise length in the suit led. For example: If he leads the two, he cannot have five cards (or the two would not be fourth highest). Similarly, if he leads the three and you can see the two, the same logic applies. If you cannot see the two, your partner may have led from three, four or five cards.

I recently led a king from K-Q-7-2 against a suit contract, and dummy had jack-third. My partner took forever to contribute the two, and my king held the trick. Can you tell me my rights and obligations in this situation in regard to continuing the suit?

Truthful James, Sunbury, Pa.

When partner breaks tempo, you must try to ignore it and make the bid or play that you would have done without that unauthorized information. Here that might mean shifting to the logical suit, but at the same time, you are not required to “stop playing bridge.” When your own hand and common sense tell you that it is right to continue the suit (as it might do here, since if declarer had the ace, he would definitely have taken it), you may do so.

When holding ♠ K-9-4-3,  J-8-7,  Q-10-7-4, ♣ A-6, I’ve been taught that if my partner opens one spade and the next hand doubles, it is correct to jump to two no-trump, suggesting a limit raise or better in spades. When I did so, I was greeted by a jump to four hearts by my partner. What should this mean — and what should I do at my next turn?

Tony the Tortoise, Marco Island, Fla.

When a new suit would be forcing, as here, a jump is known as a splinter; it shows shortage and is implicitly a slam try. With no wasted values in hearts, you have just enough for a cue-bid of five clubs. One slam try is clearly enough in this case; you will let your partner take over from here.

How much do you need to double a strong no-trump? Is any hand at the top of the range of the no-trump opener good enough, or do you need a long suit? Recently, I held ♠ K-J-2,  A-Q-2,  K-Q-4, ♣ Q-10-3-2, and doubled a no-trump, but despite partner having the club king, we could not set it.

Dumpster Dan, White Plains, N.Y.

Do not let the result on one deal change a sensible policy. While many these days do not play penalty doubles here, there is nothing wrong with your approach. If you have a respectable lead and a prime 16- or 17-count, do not hesitate to double. If they aren’t making their contract from time to time, you may not be doubling enough.

We play a strong no-trump and transfers. What method would you suggest we use when a Jacoby transfer call is doubled by the next hand?

Trumping Voluntary, Midland, Mich.

Let’s keep it simple, though I imagine more complex meanings can be assigned to the calls. Pass shows two trumps; over this, partner’s redouble is a re-transfer, with the auction continuing as it would have without intervention. Any other action by responder is less than invitational but suggesting extra shape, to help in the competitive auctions. Completing the transfer shows three trumps; other calls show values in the bid suit with a good fit for partner.


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 2018. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].