|
♠ K 8 4 2 |
|
|
♥ A 6 5 3 |
|
|
♦ 8 6 |
|
|
♣ K 6 2 |
|
♠ Q 7 6 |
|
♠ 10 9 5 |
♥ J 8 |
|
♥ Q 10 7 4 2 |
♦ Q J 7 5 4 |
|
♦ K 9 2 |
♣ Q 9 7 |
|
♣ 10 8 |
|
♠ A J 3 |
|
|
♥ K 9 |
|
|
♦ A 10 3 |
|
|
♣ A J 5 4 3 |
|
Assuming West has five diamonds and East three, the idea is to try to develop four club tricks without letting West get the lead. The technically correct play is to cross to the
♥A and lead a low club catering to the singleton queen in the East hand. If East plays the queen, play low and if West follows, you have
at least nine tricks: four clubs, two spades, two hearts and the span style=”color:#ff0000;”>♦A.
If East follows with a low club, win the ace and cross to the king (ducking the second club in dummy if West plays the lowest outstanding club). Unless West has four clubs, East will have to win the trick and again you have four club tricks or nine in all. If West shows out on the second club, rise with the king and lead a third club toward the jack, ensuring nine tricks. If West follows to the second club with the highest remaining club spot, rise with the king, and if both follow, lead a third club hoping East has the queen, better than playing on spades. If West plays the ♣10 on the second lead of clubs from an original holding of Q–10–9–x, win the ♣K and take the spade finesse.
Another play with intriguing possibilities is to run the ♠J at trick four if not covered! Yes, a Chinese finesse! If the spade finesse loses, and a heart comes back, win the ace in
dummy and play clubs as described earlier for four tricks. Your “fake finesse” wins outright when West has a spade holding of Q–x–x and doesn’t cover. In theory it loses when West started with ♣Q 10 9 x and East has ♠Q x x. But given the way you plan to play clubs, (ducking the 9 on the second round of the suit), you will go down anyway with that layout.
Notice on the actual layout of the black suits, East must cover the ♠J. Also, whenever you start with a low club from North, East must play the ♣10! If East plays the ♣8,
you can win the ace and lead a low club. When West plays the ♣9, your percentage shot is to play low hoping East has 10–x. (Q–x is okay, too.) If East started with the 10–8 doubleton,
your avoidance play has worked and you have nine tricks, minimum.