Aces on Bridge — Daily Columns

The Aces on Bridge: Saturday, April 27th, 2013

If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same….

Rudyard Kipling


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

♣9

When this deal came up at the very end of a match between the two Italian teams in the Yeh Tournament of 2008, Italy Two had just enough of a lead over their counterparts to be able to survive today's disaster.

At one table East balanced with three hearts over South’s three diamonds. West tried three no-trump and East corrected to four clubs, raised to five. With trumps 2-1, five clubs played like a dream for plus 600.

This figured to be a nice pickup, since three diamonds doubled looked destined for down one. However, instead of leading a top spade, Valerio Giubilo went for the brass ring by leading his singleton heart, covered all around. Declarer, Agustin Madala, returned a heart, and West pitched a spade rather than a club. Declarer took the heart ace and led the heart 10, discarding his club when East, Alfredo Versace, covered. The spade jack was ducked all around, then came a spade to the ace.

Declarer now led a winning heart to pitch his last spade, and West ruffed in. South ruffed the next club and passed the diamond eight successfully, holding his trump losers to one and making plus 470.

In the ending, West had to fly with the diamond ace on the first round and play a second club to get his second trump trick since South is locked in dummy with the diamond king. Whether South leads a heart or spade from dummy, West re-promotes his diamond jack to the setting trick.


This is an easy one. You are facing a passed hand. Which game do you think your side can make? It seems you have no decent fit in either major, but you do have a playable fit in diamonds. Therefore you should try to stop as low as possible since you have no values to spare. Pass two diamonds, and hope partner can make it.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ A 7 3 2
 A 10 8 7 4
 K 2
♣ 6 4
South West North East
Pass Pass 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Friday, April 26th, 2013

He has two chances, slim and none, and slim just left the building.

Chick Hearn


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

♣9

Antonio Sementa of Italy was the hero of today's deal. If you want to try it first as a single-dummy problem, then cover the East and West hands and play five diamonds on the friendly lead of West's singleton club.

Sementa won the club cheaply in dummy and rejected the idea of drawing only two rounds of trump before playing clubs. Had he done so, West would have ruffed in and would now have defeated the hand by cashing his side’s spade winner and eventually collecting a heart trick. Instead Sementa drew all the trumps, ending in dummy.

In a comparable position, a fine declarer had ruffed out the clubs and led a low spade from hand. East won, and could now have set the hand by playing back a spade. That would have allowed West to keep a spade winner at the end, since both North and South were out of trumps.

Sementa instead made the key play of leading a heart from dummy, relying on East (known to have four clubs and two diamonds, and presumably only five spades, since East-West had not bid) to have a doubleton heart honor.

When West took the heart king and played back a spade, East could lead a further spade, forcing dummy to trump and denuding North of side entries. But Sementa ruffed out the clubs, then played the heart ace, dropping the queen, and dummy was good.

Although this play might have led to extra undertricks, this was really the only legitimate chance for the contract.


Despite the fact that you have a 12-count, your side does not necessarily have a game here. A pessimistic approach would be to invite game with two no-trump or to raise to three diamonds. A more aggressive approach is to bid three clubs, a cuebid asking partner to show a club stopper or to make a descriptive call. If you take that action and hear a three-diamond rebid, you might elect to pass.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ 8 2
 A 10 8 4
 K Q 3 2
♣ K 7 4
South West North East
1♠ 2♣
Dbl. 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Thursday, April 25th, 2013

You cannot make a revolution with silk gloves.

Josef Stalin


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

*Minors, invitational

♠2

There are almost as many different ways to assign conventional meanings to three-level responses to one no-trump as there are calculations of the World's Top Player. (Only kidding: everyone knows that he would be the world's top player if he could just find a competent partner.)

In today’s deal North-South was using three-level calls to show both minors, in different ranges, with specific shortages, and thus reached a delicate game. For the record, three diamonds would have been forcing with both minors, three hearts and three spades would have shown shortage in the other major, 5-4 in the minors.

On lead against three no-trump, Migry Campanile (West) led a natural but unfortunate spade against three no trump, and declarer’s trick count was now up to seven. South, Mark Bompis of France, then made the natural, if potentially unsuccessful, play of the diamond queen from hand, trying to establish his eight-card fit, and Campanile won the king. If she had routinely returned a heart or spade, as was the case at many tables, declarer would then have had no problems both establishing diamonds and returning to dummy to make use of them.

In fact, where the board was played between two world-class teams on Vugraph, one West played a spade, the other played back a diamond. But Campanile returned a club to disrupt the entries to dummy, and now declarer had no chance when neither minor behaved.

That was a well-deserved 13 IMPs to the Israeli team.


Your partner's sequence shows four spades and the values for game, so you should correct to four spades. If your partner did not have a major, he would have simply raised to three no-trump. And since he clearly does not have hearts, you are safe to assume that you can work out which major he has!

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ A K J 4
 A Q 10 7
 Q 9 3
♣ 8 7
South West North East
1 NT Pass 2♣ Pass
2 Pass 3 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Wednesday, April 24th, 2013

He has, indeed, done it very well; but it is a foolish thing well done.

Samuel Johnson


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

3

It has frequently been said that there are more ways to kill a cat than by drowning it in a saucer of cream. In today's deal, two Wests each found a different devious defense to pose a problem for declarer in three no-trump.

When Neville Eber held the West cards, his opening lead was a diamond against the no-trump game. Geoff Hampson put up dummy’s king, as Bosenberg followed with the eight, strongly suggesting four. Declarer now played a club to the king and Neville calmly dropped the queen under it. He knew declarer was 5-2 in spades and diamonds, and whether he had three or four clubs, he could be sure that the club queen was dead in the water.

The play worked better than he could have hoped. Declarer took the card at face value and elected to go after spades (in other words needing both the spade and heart finesse). He tried to cross to the heart jack and the roof fell in: down three.

But it is well known that there are more ways to kill a cat than by choking it with cream. For example, Migry Campanile was on lead after one no-trump was raised directly to three. She kicked off with a spade — none of this fourth-highest nonsense for her. Michael Barel returned the suit, and now Campanile shifted to a diamond. Declarer ran the spades now, and Campanile had to find two discards. She pitched a heart, then the club 10. Declarer now elected to cross to the heart ace and lead a club to the nine. Oops!


You seem to be too good to pass, but you do not have enough to drive to game. Since new suits would be nonforcing, the simple invitational choices are a two-no-trump call (right on values but potentially wrong-siding no-trump) or a raise to three clubs, which might lead to an awkward 5-2 fit. A cuebid of two spades allows you to pass a three-club call and raise a two-no-trump rebid to three.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ A 9 8
 Q 5 4 2
 J 8 6 4
♣ A 5
South West North East
1♣ 1♠
Dbl. 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Tuesday, April 23rd, 2013

There are no second acts in American lives.

F. Scott Fitzgerald


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

J

In today's deal from the Yeh Tournament held five years ago, both tables reached five clubs, Fredrik Nystrom from the South seat after West had doubled a diamond call, Alfredo Versace from an uninformative auction from the North seat. Versace received a heart lead and simply played ace and another spade. Then he played a trump to hand and the East won the ace and played another trump. Versace ruffed a spade in dummy, and discovered he had two spade losers now since he was out of trump and had nowhere to park them. Down one.

Nystrom, part of the Swedish team that is currently holder of the Olympiad title, received the lead of the heart jack. He won in hand, played the ace, and ruffed a spade. Next he took the heart king and ruffed a heart.

When East followed with the heart queen Nystrom drew the sensible inference that West’s presumed length in the red-suits would leave him with short spades. So Nystrom ruffed the next spade with the club king.

Had both opponents followed, he would have played on trumps to make 11 or 12 tricks. As it was, when the bad spade break came to light, declarer ruffed a diamond to dummy, then ruffed a spade with the club eight. His second chance came when West could not overruff. Now declarer simply lost the long spade and the club ace.


If you play New Minor Forcing, you have the option of checking back for a 5-3 spade fit, but my instincts are simply to raise directly to three no-trump, giving away less information to the opponents about your shape and not giving the opponents the chance to double an artificial call.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q 10 8 7
 Q 7 3
 J 6
♣ A 9 5
South West North East
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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Monday, April 22nd, 2013

Anyone who uses the phrase 'As easy as taking candy from a baby' has never tried taking candy from a baby.

Anon.


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

♠6

Today's contract of four hearts from the 2008 Yeh Tournament proved troublesome everywhere. Eric Kokish received a spade lead to the ace and a club shift. Kokish decided it was not yet Christmas. He rose with the ace and impressed his partner with the result. When trumps were 3-3, he had 620 and a 14-IMP gain when in the other room North-South overreached to five hearts and went down 300.

By contrast, when Eddy Manoppo played four hearts, he received a spade lead and spade continuation. He discarded a diamond, and Doron Yadlin won and played a third spade. With the lead in dummy, Eddy was not prepared to look this particular gift horse in the mouth. He finessed in clubs and finished up, if not wiser, at least better informed. That same successful defense was found by Prabhakar-Tendari against John Carroll.

Curiously, had the defenders shifted to diamonds at trick three, declarer would have put in the jack and ruffed away the ace, then played three rounds of trump. Now the defenders would legitimately have had to give dummy an entry, and South would have had no reason to be suspicious.

The happiest declarer at the end of the deal was undoubtedly Hiroki Yokoi. As South, he ended up in three no trump doubled after Geir Helgemo as East had opened one club. The defenders cleared spades, leaving declarer with only one possible winning club position, the singleton king offside. Today was his lucky day!


My philosophy on blind leads against no-trump is to lead from length of more than five cards, but only lead from four-card suits if they look safe – or nothing else is attractive. Here a heart lead is plausible (I’d lead the seven rather than the three or five), but I might lead from Q-10-7-2 if that were a major rather than a minor.

LEAD WITH THE ACES

♠ Q 4 2
 7 5 3
 Q 10 7 2
♣ K 10 4
South West North East
1 NT
Pass 3 NT 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Sunday, April 21st, 2013

Playing Standard American, I held ♠ A-Q-6-4,  Q-10-4-3,  9-7-4, ♣ A-5. Would you open with a bid other than one diamond at any vulnerability or position?

Open Wide, Holland, Mich.

I would never pass this hand, but in third seat I think it is reasonable to open a major rather than diamonds. After all, diamonds is the last lead you want. Whether you open one heart or one spade is somewhat up to you, though. In fourth seat it is a tossup as to what opening you choose, but in first or second seat open one diamond. The hand is too good to pass, despite the pitiful diamond suit.

Please recommend a Web site or primer on the best techniques for opening leads and defensive leads.

Getting a Lead on Leads, San Antonio, Texas

Richard Pavlicek and Eddie Kantar have done great work in this area. Pavlicek’s Bridge Basics offers some excellent basic advice, while Kantar’s website has some very helpful tips.

In second seat I passed, holding ♠ J-9,  K-10-4-3,  Q-8-4, ♣ A-9-8-6. When my partner opened two no-trump, I used Stayman and received a three-spade response. How much is my hand worth now?

Growth Fund, White Plains, NY.

While you might have a club slam here, you seem to have no great fit, and no more than 32 HCP. It may be pessimistic, but I'd put on the brakes in three no-trump rather than invite slam with a quantitative call of four no-trump.

I’m impressed by the occasional advice you give your readers about the conventions we should consider playing. Perhaps you could head in the other direction and suggest a gadget that we should NOT play – either because it is a bad idea or because it is unnecessary.

Junk in the Trunk, Winston-Salem, N.C.

Playing two diamonds as a strong three-suiter misuses an opening bid by concentrating on a hand-type that almost never comes up. A more common conventional usage is the Rosenkranz redouble of an overcall after a negative double, showing a high honor in that suit. I prefer to raise with support rather than allow the opponents an extra round of bidding.

In a recent column you described a player as having good instinct. Are the expert's instincts better than the beginner's? Is this any different from intuition? (Personally, I suspect that the pros' instincts are far more accurate because some functions have become automatic/unconscious and have not reached that point in the amateur.)

Basic Instinct, Brandon, Miss.

I think of instinct not as learned but innate. However, one's instincts can be honed by practice. No matter how good your feel for the game, you can't succeed without experience, and making mistakes helps you learn better. Even so, there are many positions where you have to follow your nose; and some people have sharper noses' than others.


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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Saturday, April 20th, 2013

When everyone is wrong, everyone is right.

Nivelle de la Chaussee


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

3

In today's deal from a recent knockout match, there were instructive points for both declarer and the defenders.

In both rooms West led his singleton heart against four spades. In one room declarer won and played the king and ace of spades. When East showed out, declarer started cashing hearts, but when West ruffed and exited with a trump, declarer had nine tricks and no more.

In the other room, when East’s 10 appeared on the first round of trump, South could foresee that both major suits were likely to break badly. So, at trick three, he played a diamond, ducking East’s nine. East gave his partner a heart ruff, but that only worked to declarer’s advantage. If West now played a trump, declarer had 10 tricks, so he did the best he could by playing a diamond, but declarer discarded from dummy and made the rest of the tricks.

East should have worked out to continue with a second diamond rather than switch to a heart. If he does, all declarer can do is ruff in dummy and play a heart, but West trumps and plays the diamond ace. Again, declarer has only nine tricks. So can you see where both declarers went wrong?

After the heart lead, declarer simply needs to play four rounds of trump, giving West his trump trick. What can West do? A diamond is fatal, so he must play a club, covered by the jack, king and ace. Declarer simply plays a second club to establish his 10th trick in that suit.


Until you know the secret, it may perhaps be tempting to raise spades here. The best call, though, is to bid two clubs, expecting to be able to raise spades at your next turn. This will show extras with three spades. If over two clubs your partner inquires with two diamonds, the fourth suit, jump to three spades to show extras with three-card support.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q 3
 A K Q 8 2
 5
♣ J 10 6 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Friday, April 19th, 2013

Any man can make mistakes, but only an idiot persists in his error.

Cicero


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

♠K

Nobody likes to do the wrong thing at the bridge table, but West was curiously pleased with his activities in this deal. As he subsequently explained, he knew he wasn't ever going to achieve perfection, so he thought it was a good idea to fit as many mistakes as possible into one single deal, to improve his chances of performing competently on the rest.

The auction gave West his first problem. East had competed with a double of two hearts (an unusual two-no-trump call was also a live possibility, given his honor distribution) and now, over South’s jump to four hearts, West might well have bid four spades and escaped with the loss of 500 points. Five diamonds would have cost only 200, but he chose to pass.

West then led the spade king, giving declarer some chances, as East contributed the six. It looked to South as though the club ace was surely wrong, so his contract would have to depend on finding West with the club queen. Just in case the cards did not cooperate, declarer went for the cunning approach. He won with the ace, drew trump, and followed with the spade four. West, caught unawares, played the seven. Now East was forced to overtake and try to cash his top diamonds. South ruffed, ran the spade jack, and now one of dummy’s clubs went away on the spades.

To set the game, West had to rise with his spade queen and find the club switch.


Normally in this situation I would advocate bidding the major (and indeed in a heavily competitive auction one spade might work well). But if, as you expect, your LHO will simply raise to two hearts, you might do best to mention diamonds first, then bid two spades over two hearts. This way you get your suits in economically and bid your long suit first.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ K Q 7 2
 8
 10 7 5 4 2
♣ 8 4 3
South West North East
1♣ Dbl. 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].

The Aces on Bridge: Thursday, April 18th, 2013

She was worse than a blabber; she was a hinter. It gave her pleasure to rouse speculation about dangerous things.

Robertson Davies


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

K

When the Open Teams of France and Portugal met in the 2010 European Championship, France squeaked home, but Portugal scored well on this board. In the Open Room, Herve Vinciguerra for France opened one club as dealer, and Eric Eisenberg responded one spade. West doubled and East bid two diamonds. South's two spades closed the auction, and declarer emerged safely enough with his partscore.

In the Closed Room, Portugal’s Juliano Barbosa opened one club, like his French counterpart. But here, Antonio Palma speculatively jumped to four spades on his seven-loser hand. West, Alain Levy, with the strongest hand at the table, doubled, and East, Paul Chemla, let it ride.

West led the heart king, which Palma won in dummy. He called for the spade nine and when this held, followed up with dummy’s second trump to his 10, West showing out. On the club five, Levy rose with his ace, then cashed a heart trick. Knowing from East’s carding that nothing more was available in that suit, West switched to a tricky diamond jack. Unfazed, Palma called for dummy’s queen, which held, then began his trump reduction by cashing the club king and ruffing a club. A diamond to the ace and a heart ruff in hand completed his trump reduction to bring him down to the same spade length as East.

Now Palma exited in diamonds, and regardless of the return, he was able to make both his ace and queen of trumps for plus 590.


Just to set the record straight, after a one-diamond overcall over your partner's one-club opening, a bid of one of a major by you shows four or more cards, not five cards. It is important to differentiate this case from the opponents' overcalling one heart, when a one-spade call by you would show five and a double would show four spades.

BID WITH THE ACES

♠ 9 2
 A 9 6 4
 A Q 5
♣ K 7 6 4
South West North East
1♣ 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 2013. If you are interested in reprinting The Aces on Bridge column, contact [email protected].