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♠ J 8 5 |
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♥ K 6 5 2 |
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♦ A 6 5 |
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♣ K Q 5 |
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♠ A K 6 3 2 |
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♥ A 8 3 |
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♦ Q 7 2 |
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♣ 7 3 |
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West |
North |
East |
South |
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1♠ |
2NT(1) |
3♦ |
Pass |
3♠ |
Pass |
4♠ |
All |
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(1) 2NT= At least 5-5 in the minors
You are South playing in a pairs game. Partner’s 3♦ bid shows at least a limit raise in spades. You signed off but partner understandably went on to game. West starts with the ♥ 9. How do you plan to get to 10 tricks?
Solution
Declarer took the opening lead in hand with the ace to lead a club. West played low and dummy’s queen won the trick. After returning to hand with a low trump to the king, declarer led a second club. West rose with the ♣A and exited with a club to dummy’s king. Declarer threw a heart from hand and now had to decide how to continue.
If West had a second trump, it would be difficult to succeed unless the ♠Q was a doubleton. Instead, declarer went with the odds – there were there were more hearts outstanding than spades – and cashed the ♥K. When West followed with the ♥4, he was marked with an original
1=2=5=5 shape. This meant East had started with 4=4=2=3 distribution. Declarer’s saw that his only hope was to make the jack of trumps by reducing his trump length to two, one fewer than the number East now held.
Declarer ruffed a heart low then crossed back to dummy with the ♦A to ruff a second heart, reducing everyone to four cards. Declarer then exited with the ♦Q. West won with the king and tried to cash a second diamond. Alas, for the defense, East had only ♠Q 10 9 remaining, and had to ruff the third round of diamonds and then lead a trump, ensuring that dummy’s ♠J trumps would make a trick. Declarer took three trumps, two hearts, two heart ruffs, a diamond and two clubs for a total of 10 tricks. The full deal:
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♠ J 8 5 |
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♥ K 6 5 2 |
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♦ A 6 5 |
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♣ K Q 5 |
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♠ 4 |
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♠ Q 10 9 7 |
♥ 9 4 |
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♥ Q J 10 7 |
♦ K J 10 8 3 |
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♦ 9 4 |
♣ A J 10 9 4 |
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♣ 8 6 2 |
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♠ A K 6 3 2 |
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♥ A 8 3 |
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♦ Q 7 2 |
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♣ 7 3 |
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