March 31st, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 4 Comments
My hand, ♠ K-Q-3, ♥ A-5-4, ♦ J-7, ♣ K-J-9-8-4, looked like a normal one-club opening. The next hand overcalled one heart and my partner bid one spade, which I raised to two spades. Now my partner bid three diamonds, and because I was not sure if he was interested in slam or game, I did not know what to do next. Any ideas?
Lost in Space, Dodge City, Kan.
Good question! Maybe a three-heart probe will let partner disclose his intentions. If he bids only three spades, you can raise to game. If he goes past three no-trump, you can be sure he has a very good hand and can cooperate in a slam venture.
I play in a marathon bridge group and am hosting the bridge event this year. When I handed out an instruction sheet to each team recently, I indicated that on the last deal of a Chicago a partscore is worth 100 points. I was asked why. I was also asked why a side that had an unconverted partscore from an earlier deal wouldn’t get the benefit at the end of the rubber. Can you help please?
Home Rule, Saint John, New Brunswick
You have stated the rules correctly. In Chicago the last deal partscore is worth a bonus 100 points (presumably because you do not get a chance to convert it to game). The other side does NOT get a bonus if they had made a partscore on an earlier deal, as they did get a chance to make game later — and failed to do so. This might seem illogical — but them’s the rules.
Would you double a one-heart opening on your right in all positions — and at any vulnerability — with: ♠ J-8-6, ♥ K-J, ♦ K-10-6-3, ♣ A-9-8-7? Would you ever hold back if vulnerable or facing a passed partner?
Timid Timmy, San Francisco, Calif.
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I’m maybe not the best person to answer this question – you could predict in advance my answer would be to double first and reconsider later. It is normally safer to overcall or double earlier than later in almost any auction. Here you have the right shape and values to bid. If partner has a bust, it is his fault.
As a bridge teacher I’m wondering whether I should include transfer responses to one no-trump in my basic lessons. Do you think this is a good idea?
Quis custodiet, Waterbury, Conn.
I understand my friend Eddie Kantar has included transfer responses in the second edition of his "Bridge for Dummies" primer, on the grounds that it is close to the norm for all players these days. Perhaps that is a good indication of the direction you should be heading?
I opened one diamond with the following hand: ♠ K-J-9-4, ♥ K-3, ♦ A-Q-5-4, ♣ 10-6-2. My partner responded one heart and I rebid one spade. Now my partner bid two clubs, the fourth suit, and I did not know what to do. Can you help me with my thinking here?
Third Rail, Albany, Ga.
The answer is easy if you buy in to the idea that you would have raised hearts at your previous turn with a minimum unbalanced or semibalanced hand and three trumps. Thus if you bid one spade and then support hearts over the fourth-suit inquiry, you typically have a doubleton honor and have three trumps relatively infrequently. With extras and three hearts in a 4-3-5-1 shape, you jump to three hearts now.
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March 30th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 2 Comments
A week is a long time in politics.
Sir Harold Wilson
West |
North |
North-South |
♠ A 10 4 2
♥ A J 10 6 2
♦ J 5
♣ 6 2 |
West |
East |
♠ K 3
♥ 8 3
♦ K Q 10 9 3
♣ A Q J 4 |
♠ 8 6
♥ K Q 9 7 5
♦ 6 2
♣ 10 9 8 5 |
South |
♠ Q J 9 7 5
♥ 4
♦ A 8 7 4
♣ K 7 3 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
1♦ |
1♥ |
Pass |
1♠ |
2♣ |
2♠ |
Pass |
4♠ |
All pass |
|
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♦K
Partner has suggested a minimum, most likely with six or more clubs. Your choice is a simple and slightly pessimistic raise to three clubs to invite game, or a bid of two diamonds to look for spade support, planning to raise clubs later in what would then be a forcing auction. It's a slight stretch, but I'd take the more aggressive position at teams, and only invite at pairs.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ Q J 9 7 5
♥ 4
♦ A 8 7 4
♣ K 7 3 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
1♣ |
Pass |
1♠ |
Pass |
2♣ |
Pass |
? |
|
|
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March 29th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 6 Comments
Do not remove a fly from your friend's forehead with a hatchet.
Chinese proverb
East |
North |
East-West |
♠ 7 6 5
♥ K 4 3
♦ A K Q J 4
♣ Q J |
West |
East |
♠ Q 10 4 2
♥ 10 9 2
♦ 8 6
♣ K 9 6 2 |
♠ 3
♥ A Q J 8 7 5
♦ 5 3 2
♣ 10 8 3 |
South |
♠ A K J 9 8
♥ 6
♦ 10 9 7
♣ A 7 5 4 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
|
2♥ |
2♠ |
Pass |
4♠ |
All pass |
♥10
Opinions differ widely about whether it is right to raise to two hearts here. I say no; your bad trumps and defensive values suggest not getting involved directly. If the opponents allow you to balance with two hearts, you might make that call, but otherwise, unless partner can bid again voluntarily, you may be better off letting sleeping dogs lie.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ Q 10 4 2
♥ 10 9 2
♦ 8 6
♣ K 9 6 2 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
1♣ |
1♥ |
Dbl. |
? |
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March 28th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 2 Comments
She shamed to prize A world conditioned thus, or care for breath Where Nature such dilemmas could devise.
Thomas Hardy
South |
North |
North-South |
♠ K 4
♥ A 9 8 4 3
♦ J 7 5 2
♣ 9 4 |
West |
East |
♠ 9 6
♥ K 10 5
♦ Q 10 8
♣ K J 10 5 2 |
♠ J 10 7 3 2
♥ Q J 2
♦ 3
♣ Q 8 7 3 |
South |
♠ A Q 8 5
♥ 7 6
♦ A K 9 6 4
♣ A 6 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
1♦ |
Pass |
1♥ |
Pass |
1♠ |
Pass |
3♦ |
Pass |
5♦ |
All pass |
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♣J
You are certainly good enough to bid again, and you have the choice of the simpler spade call (suggesting your basic hand-pattern) or doubling. The double sounds like extra values, with perhaps a more balanced hand than this, or more playable in clubs than a doubleton, so the simple call of one spade looks best.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ A Q 8 5
♥ 7 6
♦ A K 9 6 4
♣ A 6 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
1♦ |
Dbl. |
Pass |
1♥ |
? |
|
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March 27th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 4 Comments
And with you memories come, sharp pain, and dole. Now there’s a choice — heartache or tortured liver! A sea-sick body, or a you-sick soul!
Rupert Brooke
West |
North |
Nil |
♠ A Q 8 6
♥ 5
♦ A K 10 6 4
♣ 10 7 2 |
West |
East |
♠ 9 5
♥ J 10 6
♦ J 7 5 2
♣ A 9 8 6 |
♠ 7 4
♥ A K Q 9 4 2
♦ 9 3
♣ K J 4 |
South |
♠ K J 10 3 2
♥ 8 7 3
♦ Q 8
♣ Q 5 3 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
Pass |
1♦ |
1♥ |
1♠ |
Pass |
3♠ |
Pass |
4♠ |
All pass |
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♥J
This hand is just below the minimum required for a negative double followed by a correction of two of a red suit to two spades. And since you certainly need more to make a forcing call of two spades here, you should probably pass and hope partner can reopen the bidding when he is short in clubs.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ K J 10 3 2
♥ 8 7 3
♦ Q 8
♣ Q 5 3 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
1♦ |
2♣ |
? |
|
|
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March 26th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 6 Comments
The verdict of the world is conclusive.
St. Augustine
South |
North |
Both |
♠ J 10 5
♥ J 7
♦ K Q 9 4
♣ 9 6 5 2 |
West |
East |
♠ 8 4 3
♥ 10 9 8 4 2
♦ 10 8 6 5
♣ 7 |
♠ 9 7 6 2
♥ A 6 5 3
♦ 2
♣ K 8 4 3 |
South |
♠ A K Q
♥ K Q
♦ A J 7 3
♣ A Q J 10 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
2♣ |
Pass |
2♦ |
Pass |
3 NT |
Pass |
6 NT |
All pass |
♥10
The answer here is more about partnership agreement than judgment. I suggest you adopt the idea that your partner in fourth chair can bid any suit or no-trump naturally, so a call of two clubs or two hearts would be natural. To show the unbid suits, jump to two no-trump, or double with more high cards and less shape. Here it feels right to pass two hearts, not raise to three hearts.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ J 10 5
♥ J 7
♦ K Q 9 4
♣ 9 6 5 2 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
|
1♣ |
Pass |
1♥ |
2♥ |
Pass |
? |
|
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March 25th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ Comments Off on The Aces on Bridge: Monday, March 11th, 2013
Be sure you put your feet in the right place, then stand firm.
Abraham Lincoln
South |
North |
East-West |
♠ 9 6 3
♥ 4 3
♦ A J 9 5 2
♣ K J 7 |
West |
East |
♠ Q 7 5 2
♥ K 10 8 7 5
♦ 8 6 4 3
♣ — |
♠ K J 10 4
♥ Q 9 6
♦ K
♣ 10 6 5 3 2 |
South |
♠ A 8
♥ A J 2
♦ Q 10 7
♣ A Q 9 8 4 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
1♣ |
Pass |
1♦ |
Pass |
2 NT |
Pass |
3 NT |
All pass |
♥5
Your partner's three-diamond call was a help-suit try for game. Despite your bad trumps, you have a good hand for him now. But just in case he was slam-oriented, you should raise to four diamonds; it is easy to imagine a 5-4 diamond fit playing better in slam than a five-three spade fit.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ 9 6 3
♥ 4 3
♦ A J 9 5 2
♣ K J 7 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
1♠ |
Pass |
2♠ |
Pass |
3♦ |
Pass |
? |
|
|
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March 24th, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 6 Comments
Why is it that the more aggressive players who bid contracts to the limit don't get credit, even for say an extra five points? Is it right that a team that bids three clubs and makes 10 tricks currently gets the same score as the team that bids four clubs and makes 10 tricks? The same logic would apply to a team bidding two spades making three, as compared to one bidding and making three spades.
Extra Credit, Albuquerque, N.M.
This is the precise approach in a game like spades, where there is a bonus for exact bidding. This is a good idea for the occasional tournament such as a Christmas party, but runs counter to the idea in bridge that discretion is the better part of valor. Still, maybe someone will incorporate this theme one day.
I'm confused about the concept of a maximal double. In my club last week I held ♠ 10, ♥ Q-8-7, ♦ K-J-9-4, ♣ K-Q-9-3-2. My partner opened one club and the next hand overcalled one spade. I bid two spades to show a good hand with clubs, and the next player bid three spades, doubled by my partner. Is this something special, such as a club raise with game interest?
Blinded by Science, Chicago, Ill.
After one hand or the other has given partner a simple raise, there are times when a double in competition is a game-try, but this is only after the opponents have competed to take away all bidding space. After a jump or limit raise by either hand has already established that the partnership has nearly the values for game, doubles revert to their normal meaning of penalizing the opponents.
You recently ran a sequence where opener reversed into two diamonds after opening one club and hearing a one-spade response. Can you run through again what continuations by responder should now be forcing and what can be passed?
Da Capo, Casper, Wyo.
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Here is a simple set of rules that are easy to remember. All direct actions by responder at the three-level are natural and game-forcing. Fourth suit remains artificial and an inquiry, while responder's rebid of his suit simply shows five cards and is forcing for one round, but not to game. With a weak hand and four cards in your long suit, bid two no-trump. Now all continuations by opener except fourth suit are nonforcing.
How much do I need to move on, facing a jump to game over an opponent's pre-emptive opening? I held ♠ J-7, ♥ A-7, ♦ Q-8-6-3, ♣ K-J-6-5-3 and my partner jumped to four spades over a three-heart pre-empt. How would you decide whether to bid on, and what call would you choose if you did act?
Nosedive, Elmira, N.Y.
This hand looks worth an effort, but I'm not happy with using Blackwood since I really do not know what to do over a response indicating that an ace or keycard is missing. I'd try five hearts to show my heart control and let partner decide whether he has enough to bid further.
I'm only an intermediate bridge player but one of the first things I learned is pull trump first, unless you have a reason not to (such as to crossruff, trump a loser, maintain trump control). I've noticed that experts don't always do this. Why?
Trump Eliminator, Levittown, Pa.
When you want to ruff things, don't draw trump. When you don't want to ruff anything, draw trump as soon as possible. Often it is more important to set up a side suit or take discards, or even to cut the defenders' communications before drawing trump. The only thing you need to know is "never say never."
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March 23rd, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 9 Comments
The place where optimism most flourishes is the lunatic asylum.
Havelock Ellis
South |
North |
Neither |
♠ K J 10 3
♥ 8 3
♦ A Q 10 5
♣ 9 3 2 |
West |
East |
♠ 9 8 5
♥ 6
♦ 8 6 3 2
♣ A K Q J 10 |
♠ 7 6 4 2
♥ A Q 5 4
♦ 9 7
♣ 8 6 5 |
South |
♠ A Q
♥ K J 10 9 7 2
♦ K J 4
♣ 7 4 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
1♥ |
2♣ |
Dbl. |
Pass |
3♥ |
Pass |
4♥ |
All pass |
♣K
Here a double by you is emphatically not penalties. Few low-level doubles are penalty-oriented, especially when the opponents have found a fit. This double suggests the unbid suits and values. You should be content to have a doubleton in partner's suit as a fallback for him if he does not have four cards in either black suit.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ K J 10 3
♥ 8 3
♦ A Q 10 5
♣ 9 3 2 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
1♦ |
1♥ |
2♦ |
? |
|
|
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March 22nd, 2013 ~ Bobby Wolff ~ 6 Comments
So here I’ll watch the night and wait To see the morning shine, When he will hear the stroke of eight And not the stroke of nine.
A.E. Housman
North |
North |
East-West |
♠ A 8
♥ Q J 7
♦ 10 8 7 5 2
♣ A Q 6 |
West |
East |
♠ 9 2
♥ K 10 9 5
♦ K J 4
♣ J 10 9 5 |
♠ 7 6 4
♥ 8 6 4 3 2
♦ Q 9
♣ K 8 3 |
South |
♠ K Q J 10 5 3
♥ A
♦ A 6 3
♣ 7 4 2 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
1♦ |
Pass |
1♠ |
Pass |
1 NT |
Pass |
4♠ |
All pass |
|
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♣J
A response of three no-trump would show 13-15 points while denying a four-card major. There is some real temptation to make that call, but why shouldn't your partner have really short spades or hearts, in which case game or slam in either minor might be a far superior spot? So just bid one diamond and take it from there.
BID WITH THE ACES
♠ A 8
♥ Q J 7
♦ 10 8 7 5 2
♣ A Q 6 |
South |
West |
North |
East |
|
|
1♣ |
Pass |
? |
|
|
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As I'm sure my readers will have noticed, the deals I run on Saturdays tend to be slightly more complex than those in midweek. I have a mental image of my readers having slightly more time to drink their cups of coffee, and focus a little more carefully on the newspaper.
Today’s deal features a contract of four spades reached with just half the deck in high-cards. Once the spade finesse succeeds and trumpS break 2-2, South has excellent play for 10 tricks — but what is the best line? The answer may surprise you.
After the opening lead of the diamond king to South’s ace, declarer goes after trumps. He leads the spade queen, which holds, then leads a spade to the ace. Next comes the heart ace and a heart ruff. Now declarer exits with a low diamond to West, who wins the queen and plays the 10.
Declarer ruffs, ruffs a second heart as West pitches a club, and then leads his last diamond. West plays the nine and dummy discards a club rather than ruffing. West now plays the diamond three and declarer discards dummy’s remaining club while throwing a low club too. West is left on lead and whether he plays a low club or the club ace, declarer will be able to make a trick with the club king.
Declarer finishes up by making seven trump tricks and one trick in each of the side-suits.