|
♠ Q 3 |
|
|
♥ 7 4 |
|
|
♦ A Q J 10 8 6 4 |
|
|
♣ A J |
|
♠ K 5 4 |
|
♠ 9 8 7 6 2 |
♥ Q J 9 3 |
|
♥ 6 5 |
♦ — |
|
♦ 5 3 2 |
♣ K Q 10 8 4 3 |
|
♣ 9 7 5 |
|
♠ A J 10 |
|
|
♥ A K 10 8 2 |
|
|
♦ K 9 7 |
|
|
♣ 6 2 |
|
You start with 11 top tricks. To justify the opening bid, West figures to have the ♠K as well as both heart honors. You can frequently pick up one trick by squeezing an opponent in two suits. Sometimes you can
pick up two tricks by squeezing an opponent in three suits.
You do have three threat suits and can arrange to have two single threat cards (the ♠Q and the ♣J) in dummy along with an entry to the closed hand to the longer threat, the heart suit, the suit that is
capable of producing more than one extra trick.
The trick in many of these three threat‑suit squeezes is to wind up in the hand that has the two single threat suits (North) facing the longer threat suit, hearts, in the facing hand, South. All this while you are
playing your last winner in your non‑threat suit, diamonds. Got it?
After winning the ♣A, cross to the ♠A and run seven diamonds. Before you play the seventh diamond, this is the likely position:
|
♠ Q |
|
|
♥ 7 4 |
|
|
♦ 6 |
|
|
♣ J |
|
♠ K |
|
|
♥ Q J 9 |
|
Immaterial |
♦ — |
|
|
♣ Q |
|
|
|
♠ — |
|
|
♥ A K 10 8 2 |
|
|
♦ — |
|
|
♣– |
|
On the last diamond discard a heart. If West discards a heart, all of your hearts are good, so say West discards the ♠K. You cash the ♠Q, discarding another heart and West is squeezed again. A club discard sets up your ♣J for trick 13 and a heart discard sets up your ♥10 for trick 13. (This squeeze works if West started with any four hearts.)
Oh yes, congratulations. You have just won the tournament