Bridge In Dublin


frs1016@centurylink.net
My summer tour of Ireland began in Dublin, where I played at the outstanding Regent Bridge Club. In today’s deal, my partner slipped on defense. To see if you can do better, cover the West/South cards. Defend as East.
Against five clubs, West leads the J: king, ace, deuce. What next?

Dlr: West ♠ K 6 2
Vul: All K
A 10 9 8 5 4
♣ J 5 3
♠ A 5 4 ♠ J 10 8 3
J 10 8 6 5 A Q 7 4 3
K 6 Q 7 3 2
♣ 9 6 2 ♣ —
♠ Q 9 7
9 2
J
♣ A K Q 10 8 7 4
West North East South
Pass 1 1 2♣
3 4♣(!) Pass 5♣
All Pass

Opening lead J
To beat this contract — and since not every North-South will reach game, you may need to beat it to avoid disaster — West must hold the ♠A, but unless you have a diamond or trump trick coming (unlikely), you will need two spades.

Entries

If declarer has enough entries to set up and run the diamonds, you are sunk. But if West had a singleton diamond, he might have led it. If South has one and can’t use the diamonds, he may have unavoidable spade losers.
At Trick Two, return a passive heart. As the cards lay, South must lose two spades. At my table, East shifted to the ♠J: seven, five, king. Declarer later led a spade to his nine and made his game.

Daily Question

You hold: ♠A 5 4   J 10 8 6 5   K 6    ♣9 6 2.
Your partner opens 1, you respond 1 and he bids 1♠.
What do you say?

ANSWER
You have no good call. To pass is possible — partner’s 1♠ is not forcing — but he could have 18 points, and you might miss a game. A rebid of 2 would require a longer or much stronger suit. As the lesser evil, try 1NT despite the lack of a club trick. At least your pattern is balanced.