I picked up an imp on the last board. I take that back. I picked up an imp on the previous board. The last board is yet to come. Anyway, I'm up 12 imps going into
Board 13
Both sides vulnerable
♠ K Q 8 ♥ A Q 4 2 ♦ A Q 4 2 ♣ A 8 |
Two passes to me. I open with two notrump, showing 20-21 HCP. Partner bids three clubs, Stayman. I bid three hearts and partner raises to four. LHO leads the seven of spades.
NORTH Robot ♠ A 10 5 2 ♥ 9 8 7 3 ♦ K ♣ Q 6 5 4 |
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SOUTH Phillip ♠ K Q 8 ♥ A Q 4 2 ♦ A Q 4 2 ♣ A 8 |
West | North | East | South |
Robot | Robot | Robot | Phillip |
Pass | Pass | 2 NT | |
Pass | 3 ♣ | Pass | 3 ♥ |
Pass | 4 ♥ | (All pass) |
The seven of spades is probably from shortness. If it's from length, it must be from specifically jack-nine-seven. I play low from dummy, East plays the three, and I win with the eight.
Surely East would have played the nine if he had it, so West should have jack-nine-seven. Still, I've seen the robots make some pretty strange ducks third hand. And jack-nine third is not an attractive holding to lead from. So, even though it appears spades are three-three, I'm keeping an open mind.
Even if I lose three trump tricks, I should make this. I can ruff my diamond loser in dummy and pitch my club loser on dummy's long spade. I just have to make sure I get to do all that. If spades are not three-three, I'll need the diamond ruff as my entry to cash the long spade, so I don't want to ruff a diamond early.
In isolation, the proper way to play the heart suit is to cash the ace, then lead toward the queen. If the king is onside, this line doesn't cost anything, since I always have at least one trump loser whatever I do. And it saves a trick if the king is offside singleton.
In this case, however, since I need to postpone my diamond ruff, I can't afford to give up control of the trump suit. Suppose, for example, I cash the heart ace, play a diamond to dummy and lead another heart. If East shows out, West can play three rounds of trump, stopping my diamond ruff. Then, if it turns out spades aren't three-three, I could go down, losing two hearts, a diamond, and a club.
Playing three rounds of trump is an easy defense for West if his partner's singleton was the jack or ten. If West has king-jack-ten fourth, playing three rounds of trump costs a trump trick, but it gets that trick back by stopping the diamond ruff. And it gains two tricks if spades don't break, since it kills my entry to the long spade.
A stiff heart on my right is more likely than specifically a stiff king on my left. Plus, I'm not even sure it hurts to lose a finesse to a stiff king. Let's go through the play to check.
Say I lead a diamond to dummy, play a heart to the queen, and West wins with the king and shifts to a club--queen--king--ace. I cash the trump ace, and West shows out. I think I'm still OK. I start by cashing two spades. I know they're cashing, since if anyone is short in spades, it's West. Now I ruff a diamond in dummy. I've reached this position with the lead in dummy:
NORTH Robot ♠ A ♥ 9 ♦ -- ♣ 6 5 4 |
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SOUTH Phillip ♠ -- ♥ 4 2 ♦ A Q ♣ 8 |
So far, I've scored three spades, the trump ace, the club ace, the diamond king and a diamond ruff. Seven tricks. I cash the last spade, pitching a club. If East ruffs, I'm home, since I have control and lose only three trump tricks. If East is out of spades, he does better to discard. But now I've taken eight tricks. All I have to do is ruff a club for the ninth, then cash a diamond for my tenth. If it cashes, that is.
Actually, if East is 3-4-3-3, he can pitch a diamond on the fourth spade. Now, when I try to cash the diamond ace, he can ruff, draw my last trump, and cash a club trick. To prevent that, I have to cash the diamond ace before ruffing a diamond in dummy. Now I reach this position with the lead in dummy, having taken eight tricks instead of seven:
NORTH Robot ♠ A ♥ 9 ♦ -- ♣ 6 5 |
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SOUTH Phillip ♠ -- ♥ 4 2 ♦ Q ♣ 8 |
I lead the spade ace. Again, if East ruffs, I'm home. But this time if he discards, the spade ace is my ninth trick and the club ruff will be my tenth.
If East started with a doubleton diamond, this line won't work, since he can overruff the third round and cash his club. But that's quite a parlay. For me to go down by taking the heart finesse, West must have a stiff king of hearts and six diamonds, and East must have the club king. If that's what I'm guarding against by cashing the heart ace, taking the finesse looks safer than the "safety play."
I play a diamond to the king. West plays the three; East, the six. Now nine of hearts--six--queen--king.
West shifts to the six of spades. The six! So he did lead a doubleton. And East, for some reason, withheld his nine at trick one. I was right to worry about that.
I win in my hand and cash the heart ace. Everyone follows, so I have no further problems. I cash a third spade, ruff a diamond to dummy, and pitch a club on the spade ace. I have only a trump loser left. Making five.
NORTH Robot ♠ A 10 5 2 ♥ 9 8 7 3 ♦ K ♣ Q 6 5 4 |
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WEST Robot ♠ 7 6 ♥ K 5 ♦ J 10 7 5 3 ♣ K 10 9 7 |
EAST Robot ♠ J 9 4 3 ♥ J 10 6 ♦ 9 8 6 ♣ J 3 2 |
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SOUTH Phillip ♠ K Q 8 ♥ A Q 4 2 ♦ A Q 4 2 ♣ A 8 |
I can't construct a layout where it's right for East to play low on the spade lead. The robots need a diagnostic mode, so you can ask what they're "thinking" about.
Fortunately, Jazlene has a diagnostic mode. You can hear her thoughts on the board at JazPlaysBridge.