Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Jaz Hands - Board 15

Board 15
Both sides vulnerable


This week, we take a look at the penultimate board in the Jazlene's match.

♠ 8 5   J 9 8   A Q 10 9  ♣ 10 8 6 2  

You pass. LHO opens with two hearts, weak, partner passes, and RHO bids two notrump, showing a game-forcing hand with five or more spades. LHO bids three hearts, showing precisely a doubleton spade, and RHO bids four spades. Everyone passes.

RHO was apparently interested in finding the right strain for game. It's very likely she holds a singleton heart, else she might have bid four hearts and not bothered to look for a spade fit. That means declarer might have two fast pitches, so it may be necessary to cash our minor-suit tricks quickly. If so, perhaps we should lead the diamond ace. If partner has the king, maybe we can cash three diamonds and find a fourth trick somewhere. Or maybe declarer has a stiff heart honor and dummy has the diamond king, in which case ace and a diamond may kill the entry before declarer get's a chance to unblock hearts. 

On second thought, I don't think the diamond ace makes much sense. If you lead a diamond, it's probably better to lead low. If the idea is to kill dummy's entry, low will work just as well as the ace. If partner has the king, low will work better if it's doubleton. The usual reason for leading the ace rather than low in a cash-out situation--that you retain the option of shifting--doesn't really apply here. If a diamond lead is wrong, it probably doesn't matter whether you lead the ace or a low one. You've blown the defense either way.

The alternative is to lead a club, hoping partner has the club ace and can lead a diamond through declarer's king. Perhaps he has the diamond jack and we can take three diamond tricks. Or perhaps he has a doubleton and can score a ruff. 

Which is better? A club lead might enable us to take four tricks off the top if partner has as little as the club ace. A diamond lead, even if you do catch partner with the king, yields at most three diamond tricks, so you will still need to find partner with another trick somewhere. A club lead, then, should work more often than a diamond lead.

Jazlene opts for a club. She leads the six, third best from even.

NORTH
Paulus
♠ Q 9
K Q 7 6 3 2
4 3
♣ Q 9 7
WEST
Jazlene
♠ 8 5
J 9 8
A Q 10 9
♣ 10 8 2
♣ 6

West North East South
Jazlene Paulus Gideon Desy
Pass 2 Pass 2 NT
Pass 3 Pass 4 ♠
(All pass)

Declarer plays low from dummy, partner plays the jack, and declarer wins with the ace. She would have played the queen with ace-small, so she must have either a singleton ace or ace-king. If the latter, winning with the ace was a mistake. Had she won with the king, it would be possible from our perspective that partner held the ace. As it is, we know we have no club tricks coming.

Declarer cashes the ace of hearts. Presumably she is unblocking a stiff ace so she can pitch diamonds on the king and queen. Next she'll play ace of spades and a spade to the queen, then take her pitches. At least, if partner does have the diamond king, only two diamonds were cashing, so a diamond lead would not have helped.

We play the nine; partner plays the four. We play upside-down count and attitude, so partner's four shows an even number. But he knows I can deduce the heart count. No need to help out declarer--especially when she may need to decide how many hearts are cashing.

Declarer doesn't play trumps as expected. She cashes the ace of clubs. There is no reason to do this unless she started with ace-king tight. She is unblocking both suits so she can take pitches from either one.

How many pitches can she take? Let's say this is the layout:

NORTH
Paulus
♠ Q 9
K Q 7 6 3 2
4 3
♣ Q 9 7
WEST
Jazlene
♠ 8 5
J 9 8
A Q 10 9
♣ 10 8 6 2
EAST
Gideon
♠ 6 3 2
10 5 4
J 7 2
♣ J 5 4 3
SOUTH
Desy
♠ A K J 10 7 4
A
K 8 6 5
♣ A K

After ace and queen of spades, she'll pitch a diamond on the heart king and another on the club queen. We'll now be down to this position:

NORTH
Paulus
Q 9
Q 7 6 3 K 2
4 3
Q 9 7
WEST
Jazlene
8 5
8 J 9
A Q 10 9
♣ 10 8 6 2
EAST
Gideon
♠ 6 3 2
10 5 4
J 7 2
♣ 5 J 4 3
SOUTH
Desy
♠ K J 10 7 A 4
A
K 8 6 5
A K

She has two ways to try for six: (A) Cash a heart, pitching another diamond. This requires three-three hearts or the hand with four hearts to hold the last trump. Or (B) lead up to the diamond king. Our goal is to talk her into (B). Partner got us off to a good start with his false count in hearts. If we follow with the jack when declarer cashes the king, it may look as if hearts are four-two, in which case she will lead a diamond to the king.

What should we play on this trick? It's probably best declarer knows we started with four clubs. Since we're representing heart shortness, we want to represent club length. So we follow with the deuce of clubs. Partner plays the three.

Declarer plays the four of spades. Interesting. She must be missing either the ace or king of spades, else she would have played ace and a spade to the queen to draw as many trumps as possible before taking pitches.

Declarer plays the nine from dummy, and partner wins the king. Declarer has ace-jack-ten of spades, so the queen of spades is a dummy entry. Again declarer was careless with her carding. Had she played the queen from dummy, I couldn't be sure that the nine was an entry.

Partner shifts to the deuce of diamonds. Declarer plays the jack and we win with the queen.

If declarer had played the queen of spades, it would be right to return a spade. If partner has a spade higher than the nine, we can keep declarer off dummy and take two more diamond tricks to beat this. Since the nine is an entry, declarer would take the rest.

But we know the spade queen is an entry. So we might as well cash the the diamond ace. No need to lose the overtrick. 

We cash the it, and declarer claims. Making four.

NORTH
Paulus
♠ Q 9
K Q 7 6 3 2
4 3
♣ Q 9 7
WEST
Jazlene
♠ 8 5
J 9 8
A Q 10 9
♣ 10 8 6 2
EAST
Gideon
♠ K 3 2
10 5 4
7 5 2
♣ J 5 4 3
SOUTH
Desy
♠ A J 10 7 6 4
A
K J 8 6
♣ A K

A low diamond lead wouldn't have mattered. Declarer would win, cash winners, and exit a diamond. We have no realistic chance to beat this now. But we can win and tap dummy with a third diamond to score partner's spade king and hold it to four.

We've seen a number of good plays and a number of bad plays in the course of reviewing this match. But if I were playing in this match and made every mistake we've encountered so far, playing the spade nine instead of the queen is the error I would be most upset about. It may have cost only an overtrick, but it betrays that you weren't even trying to see the deal from the opponents' perspective.

Mistakes are unavoidable. We miscalculate. We misjudge. We have blind spots. But looking at the deal through your opponents' eyes is something that should always be top of mind. One can never become a top player until that becomes a habit.

And one of the primary goals of Gargoyle Chronicles is to help you get into that habit. You may have noticed we spend a lot of time in these posts asking, "Why is my opponent doing this? What can I deduce about the layout from his actions?" Even when it would seem not to matter. That's because these are the questions you should be asking yourself routinely. And the good news is you can ask these questions on any deal. So every deal you play offers a chance to practice. 

That's why, when covering a match, we never skip over a deal. I'm a firm believer that every deal offers an opportunity to learn something. If you can't find it, you just haven't looked hard enough. (By the way, I first heard this sentiment expressed by Michael Rosenberg. I don't want him saying I didn't give him credit.)

At the other table, Jaz's teammates reached four hearts from the South side after a multi-two diamond opening by North. West led the spade eight, and East made the mistake of covering the queen. Declarer now took all thirteen tricks. If East withholds his king, declarer has no way to take more than eleven tricks.

Say declarer repeats the finesse, cashes the heart ace, and leads the ace of spades. West ruffs, declarer overruffs and cashes the trump king, leaving East with a high trump. He then plays a club to his hand and cashes a spade, pitching a diamond from dummy. East ruffs and plays a diamond to his partner's ace, scoring two tricks for the defense.

East's error, along with South's error at our table, resulted in a three-imp pickup for Jazlene. So her team is up six imps going into the last board.

Be sure to come back next week for the conclusion of the match. Spoiler alert: we face a slam decision, so the match is still up for grabs.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Jaz Hands - Board 14

Board 14
Opponents vulnerable

This week, we continue with Jazlene's Mixed Team match. Here is Hope's discussion of today's deal on YouTube:


♠ 7 4   6 5 4   A 10 5 2  ♣ K Q J 3  

We'll start the board in Jazlene's seat. RHO opens one diamond. You pass. LHO bids one spade, partner overcalls with two hearts, and RHO passes. You bid two spades to show your limit raise, and LHO bids three clubs. Partner bids three notrump, which RHO doubles. You have a source of tricks in clubs and bad trumps. And your only ruffing value is suspect, since partner probably has secondary spade values, so you opt to play three notrump. LHO has other ideas, however. He pulls to four clubs. Partner bids four hearts, and RHO doubles again. Everyone passes. RHO leads the eight of clubs.

Now we switch over to Gideon's seat for the play.

NORTH
Jazlene
♠ 7 4
6 5 4
A 10 5 2
♣ K Q J 3
SOUTH
Gideon
♠ A 5 3
Q 10 9 8 7 2
K 8
♣ A 2

West North East South
Desy Jazlene Paulus Gideon
1 Pass 1 ♠ 2
Pass 2 ♠ 3 ♣ 3 NT
Double Pass 4 ♣ 4
Double (All pass)

The opponents have done a lot of bidding and doubled you twice with a mere 17 HCP. Obviously East has a lot shape, at least six-five in the black suits. But what is West doubling on? She must have all three heart honors, probably fourth. So we've got three heart losers for starters. To make this, we need to pitch both of our spade losers on clubs. Three notrump was the right idea. In that contract, we can duck one spade and hold our losses to one spade and three hearts.

Unfortunately, this contract is problematic. Let's give West

♠ x x   A K J x   Q J x x x  ♣ x x  

Upon winning the first heart, West will shift to a spade. Now we can't avoid a spade loser. But she doesn't know we have six hearts, so maybe we can sneak a heart through. If we lead a low heart and she ducks, we can cash two clubs and pitch a spade. She ruffs and switches to spades. Now we win and play a diamond to dummy to pitch our last spade on the fourth club. All she gets are her three trump tricks.

East plays the ten of clubs. We take take ace and lead the deuce of hearts. No good. West hops with the jack, and East pitches the deuce of spades. West shifts to the ten of spades, and East overtakes with the king. We can't avoid a spade loser, so might as well duck this. Could West have a stiff spade? No. She would have led it in preference to a club. And East wouldn't have bothered bidding clubs with king-queen-jack seventh of spades.

We duck. East plays the queen of spades. We take the ace and ruff a spade in dummy. Down one.

The full deal:

NORTH
Jazlene
♠ 7 4
6 5 4
A 10 5 2
♣ K Q J 3
WEST
Desy
♠ 10 6
A K J 3
Q J 7 6 4 3
♣ 8
EAST
Paulus
♠ K Q J 9 8 2
--
9
♣ 10 9 7 6 5 4
SOUTH
Gideon
♠ A 5 3
Q 10 9 8 7 2
K 8
♣ A 2

Surprisingly, that was a stiff club. Why didn't East play a club back for down two? I could understand a diamond shift, playing declarer for

♠ A x x   A 10 9 x x x   Q x   ♣ A x  

After a club return, West ruffs with a natural trump trick and can't stop us from pitch our diamond loser, so we're down only one. A diamond shift sets up a diamond trick for down two. But I don't see how a spade continuation can ever be right.

At the other table, the auction began the same way, but over North's cue-bid, East chose to rebid three spades rather than show his club suit. South bid four hearts, and West doubled.

West then tried a sneak attack. Instead of leading her stiff club, she led her doubleton spade. Ostensibly, this lead is a mistake, since it allows South to duck, then ruff his spade in dummy, getting out for down one. But it had the effect of misleading South about the layout. With East never bidding clubs, South never envisioned a stiff club on his left. It was a stiff spade he was worried about. East had bid three spades with no high cards other than the king-queen-jack of spades. Would he do that with only six spades? Further, wouldn't a stiff spade make West's double of four hearts more attractive? If East ducked the spade, then West ruffed out his ace, he would be down two in a cold contract. If West did have a stiff spade, he could make this by winning the first trick and driving the heart honors, eventually pitching both his spades on dummy's clubs.

He went for it. He won the first spade. Then he did something foolish. He crossed to dummy with a club to lead a heart, eventually losing three hearts, two spades, and a club ruff for down three. Even forgetting about the double, declarer knows West has the ace and king of hearts for her opening bid. So it never gains to lead hearts from the table. He should have just played the queen of hearts from his hand at trick two. But it made no difference. Had he done that, West could draw dummy's trumps, lead a spade to partner, pitch her stiff club on the third round of spades, then get a club ruff. Still down three. The sneak attack worked.

Jaz's team thus picked up nine imps and found themselves in the lead by two.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Jaz Hands -- Board 13

Board 13
Our side vulnerable

This week, we continue with Jazlene's Mixed Team match. Here is Alex's discussion of today's deal on YouTube:


♠ 6 2   A J 10 7 3   K 9 4  ♣ Q 10 8  

Gideon opens one spade. Jazlene bids one notrump, semi-forcing, and Gideon passes, showing a balanced minimum. RHO apparently forgot to overcall, so she corrects her mistake now and balances with two clubs.

Some players would bid two hearts here, thinking they have to do something, because partner opened the bidding and they have ten HCP. But those high cards take tricks on defense as well as offense. Since we don't have a game, our objective is simply to go plus. So the question becomes, are we more likely to go plus defending two clubs or bidding two hearts?

As in most low-level competitive decisions, the Law of Total Tricks is your guide. If the opponents are in a seven-card club fit, they are probably going down, and defending is your safest route to a plus score. If they have an eight-card club fit, then you have eight hearts (since partner must be 5-3-3-2), and two hearts must be a heavy favorite to make. So you want to defend if partner has three clubs and to bid two hearts if he has a doubleton.

If you pass, you can accomplish that. If partner has three clubs, he will sell out. If he has two, he will reopen with a double, and you can bid two hearts.

Jazlene got the first part right. She passed. But then, when Gideon reopened with a double, she decided to go for blood and passed. That's unlikely to be the winning decision. If either two clubs or two hearts makes and the other contract goes down, it doesn't make difference whether we bid or defend. The large swings happen when either both contracts make or both go down. So your decision rests on which of those two scenarios you think is more likely. When they have eight clubs and we have eight hearts, surely both contracts making is more likely.

Jazlene says it was a state-of-the-match decision. "I wasn't getting rich playing two hearts." I assume by that she meant she was hoping to collect 500. It's true that if you do get lucky and collect 500, you pick up 8 imps. So, even though that's unlikely, it might be a worthwhile gamble if the risk were small. But if both two hearts and two clubs are making, you lose 7 imps by passing. Risking 7 imps to pick up 8 on a longshot doesn't seem like good odds to me, whatever the state of the match.

NORTH
Paulus
♠ K J 8 4
9 8 6 2
Q 7 5
♣ K 5
WEST
Jazlene
♠ 6 2
A J 10 7 3
K 9 4
♣ Q 10 8

West North East South
Jazlene Paulus Gideon Desy
1 ♠ Pass
1 NT Pass Pass 2 ♣
Pass Pass Double (All pass)

You lead the spade six. Dummy plays low, and partner's ten forces declarer's ace. We know a lot about the layout. Declarer must be 2-1-4-6 with 7 to 9 HCP. Unfortunately, declarer knows the shape also. So if she has ace sixth of clubs, she will cash two top clubs and work on diamonds, losing one heart, one clubs, and three diamonds. Making two.

Surprisingly, she doesn't cash clubs. She plays the deuce of diamonds from her hand at trick two. What's that about? Maybe she has the diamond ace instead of the club ace. Does that help? That gives us one heart, one diamond, and three clubs. Nope. Still not beating it.

Perhaps she's not so confident about the shape. Perhaps she thinks we wouldn't sit for the double without four clubs, making partner 5-3-4-1. That would make for a strange pass of one notrump. But somebody did something strange. So why not partner?

If declarer does have the ace of clubs and is determined to work on diamonds, perhaps we have a chance. Hop with the diamond king, cash the heart ace to avoid any accidents, and play another spade. If declarer wins and persists in diamonds, partner wins the jack and leads the spade queen. Declarer ruffs, we overruff and lead a diamond to partner for another spade. Down one. 

Would declarer continue diamonds in that scenario, or revert to cashing clubs? If she genuinely believes we are 2-5-2-4, perhaps. Who knows? In any event, it's the only chance I see. But it's not risk-free. If declarer has the diamond jack, hopping gives her an overtrick. But it may be worth the risk. If the opponents are plus 140 at the other table, we're already minus 8 imps. Dropping the overtricks costs only 3 more. If we beat this, we go plus 2 imps for a net gain of 10. I like those odds.

Jazlene doesn't go for it. She ducks the diamond, inserting the nine. That play I don't get. I know it's the right count card (playing upside-down). But if declarer has jack-eight, it costs a trick. Technical plays take precedence over signals.

Partner captures dummy's queen with the ace and shifts to the queen of hearts. Declarer follows low. Partner led the queen from king-queen third? I assume that was an attempt to show the diamond jack. Please don't do that, partner. 

Playing suit-preference games with honors make me nervous. Queen, then king, usually means "I have a doubleton. Please overtake." Yes, that can't be true here, so I should read the card as suit preference. But some day partner might not notice an ambiguity like that. I'm happier if he just plays his standard card and lets me work the hand out myself. If I need him to have the diamond jack, I'll play him for it.

What heart should we play? A discouraging heart here should show the spade lead was a singleton. So if we discourage, partner will shift to a spade, hoping to give us two ruffs. We don't want that, so we encourage with the deuce (upside down). Partner continues with the king of hearts. Declarer ruffs, plays a club to the king and another diamond. Yes. If partner has a stiff club and four diamonds, that's what she must do. She can eventually ruff her diamond loser in dummy as Jazlene ruffs in front of dummy with a natural trump trick.

Diamonds were three-three all along, so declarer loses three diamonds and a club. Making two.

NORTH
Paulus
♠ K J 8 4
9 8 6 2
Q 7 5
♣ K 5
WEST
Jazlene
♠ 6 2
A J 10 7 3
K 9 4
♣ Q 10 8
EAST
Gideon
♠ Q 10 7 5 3
K Q 5
A J 6
♣ J 7
SOUTH
Desy
♠ A 9
4
10 8 3 2
♣ A 9 6 4 3 2

Jazlene might not have gotten rich in two hearts, but she would have earned a respectable income, since the opponents had an accident in the other room. North opened one spade and East bid two clubs, making the sensible decision to bid his hand immediately. Waiting to bid until the opponents have had a chance to exchange information is a poor strategy.

Over two clubs, South bid two hearts, presumably not game-forcing in competition. North raised to three hearts, and South went on to four.

Three hearts shows a dead minimum. With a little extra--or with any hand that holds a fourth trump--partner will raise to game. So with eights losers, including a likely wasted card in the opponent's suit, Della should have passed. The only reason I can think of for accepting was she thought three hearts was forcing. But I'm just guessing. Sometimes players who were weaned on two-over-one game forcing are surprisingly unfamiliar with standard methods.

So Jazlene lost only 2 imps on her gamble. Had she bid two hearts, she would have picked up 6.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Free Weekly Instant Tournament - February 6 - Board 1

Board 1
Neither side vulnerable

We're taking a break from Jaz's Mixed Team match to try an experiment in the Gargoyle Chronicles YouTube channel. Alex is streaming the play straight from BBO, pausing here and there to break things down. So you see it unfold in real time and then hop into analysis mode when it matters.

You can watch the video here. If you watch, let me know if you like the new format. I think it might make the distinction clearer between what actually happened at the table and the hypothetical lines I'm considering as I play.


No way to stream here. So we'll just continue as usual.

♠ Q 9 6 5   A Q 8   A K 8 3  ♣ A 5  

Two passes to me. I open one diamond, planning to rebid two-notrump.

Partner bids one spade. So I forget about two notrump and raise to four spades instead. Everyone passes.

NORTH
Phillip
♠ Q 9 6 5
A Q 8
A K 8 3
♣ A 5
SOUTH
Robot
♠ A 8 7 3
J 7 3
7 6
♣ K Q J 4

West North East South
Robot Phillip Robot Robot
Pass
Pass 1 Pass 1 ♠
Pass 4 ♠ (All pass)

The opening lead is the four of diamonds. I win in dummy with the ace. East plays the five. The deuce of diamonds is missing, so I can't tell if the lead is from length or from shortness.

If I ruff two diamonds in my hand, I can pitch both of dummy's hearts on my clubs and avoid a heart finesse. Then I lose only whatever trump tricks I have to. Since West might be overruffing, ruffing two diamonds could be tough to pull off. Alternatively, I can ruff only one diamond, pitch a diamond and a heart on clubs, then take a heart finesse. So Plan A is two ruffs, no finesse; Plan B is one ruff plus a finesse. 

How do I tackle trumps? If I play ace and another, the defenders might be able to draw a third round and stop a second diamond ruff. And if East has four trumps to the king, they might even draw all my trumps and stop any ruffs at all. So it looks best to keep the spade ace in reserve--to keep control and flexibility.

So club to my king--three from East; deuce from West--and a trump. West rises with the king; East follows with the four. West continues with the deuce of diamonds, and East plays the queen. So West's original length is either two or five. From jack-ten-nine fifth he would lead the jack, so I'm assuming it's a doubleton.

Here is the current position:

NORTH
Phillip
♠ Q 9 6
A Q 8
8 3
♣ A
SOUTH
Robot
♠ A 8 7
J 7 3
--
♣ Q J 4

At this point, ruffing two diamonds won't work, since West is overruffing. But if trumps are three-two, Plan B is still on: draw trumps, ruff one diamond, take two pitches, then try the heart finesse. That's either making either six or five, depending on the finesse.

The potential problem is four-one trumps. If someone has four, it's probably West, since he's short in diamonds. I want to keep the spade ace as an entry to my hand. So the right play is to cash the queen first. If East shows out, I can cash the club ace, play a spade to my ace, then cash clubs, pitching a diamond and a heart, coming down to this:

NORTH
Phillip
♠ 9
A Q
8
♣ --
SOUTH
Robot
♠ 8
J 7 3
--
♣ --

Now a heart finesse doesn't hurt. If it loses, East can't do any damage. I'll still ruff a diamond in hand and lose to the last trump. That's making five if the heart finesse works and four if it doesn't.

It's important to cash the spade queen first. If I lead a spade to the ace and East shows out, I've mangled my entries. If I cash the spade queen and club ace and ruff a diamond to my hand, West overruffs and plays a heart:

NORTH
Phillip
♠ 9
A Q 8
8
♣ --
9
SOUTH
Robot
♠ --
J 7 3
--
♣ Q J

Now if the heart finesse loses, East has a diamond to cash and I'm down.

Alright. Queen of spades--deuce--seven--ten. Spade to the ace. West pitches the seven of clubs. Club to the ace. West follows with the ten; East pitches the deuce of hearts.

Whoa! East had a stiff club? Good thing I didn't need to unblock the ace early.

Now I ruff a diamond, cash clubs, and take the heart finesse. It wins. Making six.

NORTH
Phillip
♠ Q 9 6 5
A Q 8
A K 8 3
♣ A 5
WEST
Robot
♠ K 10
K 10 9
4 2
♣ 10 9 8 7 6 2
EAST
Robot
♠ J 4 2
6 5 4 2
Q J 10 9 5
♣ 3
SOUTH
Robot
♠ A 8 7 3
J 7 3
7 6
♣ K Q J 4

Plus four eighty is worth 93%. West can give partner a club ruff when he wins the spade king to hold me to five. And East can help by tossing the jack of spades under the king as an alarm-clock signal. But robots don't signal. And probably don't own alarm clocks.

Next week, we'll return to Jazlene's match. Four boards left.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Jaz Hands -- Board 12

Board 12
Both sides vulnerable

Today we discuss Board 12 of Jazlene's match. You can read about it here. But it would make Hope happy if you watched her discuss it on our YouTube channel:


♠ 6 5   K Q 9 4   6 5 3  ♣ J 10 9 5  

LHO opens one diamond, Precision. RHO bids one spade, and LHO bids two clubs, showing length in both minors but with no indication of which suit is longer. RHO bids two hearts, artificial and forcing, and LHO bids two notrump. RHO bids three spades, showing six, and LHO bids three notrump. 

Everyone passes and partner leads the seven of hearts.

NORTH
Desy
♠ A K 10 7 4 3
A J 3
K J 4
♣ 2
7
EAST
Jazlene
♠ 6 5
K Q 9 4
6 5 3
♣ J 10 9 5

West North East South
Gideon Desy Jazlene Paulus
1
Pass 1 ♠ Pass 2 ♣
Pass 2 Pass 2 NT
Pass 3 ♠ Pass 3 NT
(All pass)

Our agreements are second-highest from a bad suit, so it looks as if partner has either 107x or 87x. Declarer plays low from dummy.

What do we know about the layout?  With a doubleton spade, Paulus probably would have bid four spades, so his most likely shapes are 1-3-5-4 or 1-3-4-5. He has at least 11 HCP, which leaves partner with at most 7. Declarer has two spade tricks and a heart trick. He needs six more tricks to make this.

Let's give partner queen-jack of spades so declarer won't have a third spade trick. Partner can have one more card. The diamond ace won't be helpful. That means declarer must have ace-king-queen of clubs, which gives him six tricks in the minors. So let's give partner the ace or king clubs. Now declarer has solid diamonds and one club trick. Five diamonds would give him eight tricks, so I must assume he has only four.

Good. Now I have my construction. I'm playing declarer for 1-3-4-5 and I'm playing partner for the ace or king of clubs. I have no particular reason to believe that's the layout. But it's what I must assume if we're going to beat this. If I'm right, declarer must set up his ninth trick in the club suit. So I'm aiming for three hearts and two club tricks.

If partner has the heart ten, I can insert the nine, then return the king of hearts. On my construction, declarer is now down. But if declarer has the heart ten, that's his ninth trick. Can we beat this if I play the heart queen? Let's imagine this layout:

NORTH
Desy
♠ A K 10 7 4 3
A J 3
K J 4
♣ 2
WEST
Gideon
♠ Q J 9 2
8 7 6
9 8 7
♣ A 7 4
EAST
Jazlene
♠ 6 5
K Q 9 4
6 5 3
♣ J 10 9 5
SOUTH
Paulus
♠ 8
10 5 2
A Q 10 2
♣ K Q 8 6 3

Say I play the queen and shift to the jack of clubs. Declarer covers. Partner wins the ace and shifts back to hearts. That's good enough. I can set up my long heart, and I have an entry in clubs.

But there is a serious flaw in that analysis. Why would declarer ever cover? He's perfectly happy to lose club tricks to me. So he'll just duck. If I continue with the ten, he will duck again. Now he's cold as long as clubs break.

But why should he assume the club ace is offside? Isn't that double-dummy? No, it's not. He doesn't care who has the club ace. This line requires only that clubs break four-three. Then he loses three clubs and one heart.

So if I'm going to lead clubs, I must lead a low one. Defenders are often afraid to make such plays out of an unconscious, irrational fear that declarer can see their hand. But as a practical matter, leading low can't hurt. If partner has the eight, leading low works by force. And if declarer has the eight, he's not going to play it. He wants to keep partner off play, not let him in cheaply. So if he has ace-queen, he'll finesse. If he has king-queen, he'll play the king, hoping I have the ace. Then he can either duck a spade, hoping they're three-three, or cash his winners and play ace and heart, hoping I must give him a club trick in the end. 

But maybe I shouldn't lead clubs at all. If declarer has the hand I'm hoping for, there is no reason to lead them. Declarer must play clubs himself. My Third Rule of Defense is: Don't break a suit declarer must play himself.

Look what happens after a diamond shift. If declarer has king-queen of clubs, he can't make his contract even if he can see my hand. He wins in dummy and leads a club. I split. Declarer ducks, and I play another diamond. Declarer wins in hand leads the eight of clubs, keeping partner off play. I win and play a third diamond. Declarer is down. He can set up his clubs but has no way to reach them. 

Which is better, a low club or a diamond shift? I'm sure Lowenthal would lead a low club. He relished that kind of play. Personally, I like the elegance of a diamond shift. But one thing you can't do is lead the club jack. That can never beat the contract unless declarer is fast asleep.

Jazlene leads the club jack. Declarer takes the ace and leads the eight of spades. Partner plays the queen. Declarer cashes the ace and king of spades and plays a third spade. Partner wins and plays a heart. Declarer finesses, you win the king, and declarer claims ten tricks.

NORTH
Desy
♠ A K 10 7 4 3
A J 3
K J 4
♣ 2
WEST
Gideon
♠ Q J 9 2
10 7 6
10 9 7
♣ 7 4 3
EAST
Jazlene
♠ 6 5
K Q 9 4
6 5 3
♣ J 10 9 5
SOUTH
Paulus
♠ 8
8 5 2
A Q 8 2
♣ A K Q 8 6

That was a strange line of play. Declarer has ten top tricks. His best play for an eleventh is surely to duck the club jack. If clubs are four-three, he has the rest. If not, he has lots of squeeze chances. Playing for three-three spades instead is a weird choice.

Jazlene's teammates played three notrump from the other side and made five, so she picks up an imp.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Jaz Hands -- Board 11

Board 11
Neither side vulnerable

We continue our discussion of the Ong-Tan vs Noervita-Sugandi match from the SEABF Mixed Teams.

You can watch Alex's discussion of Board 11 on our YouTube channel:


♠ K 9 5 4   10 7 5   Q J 10 7  ♣ K J  

RHO opens one club, Precision, in fourth seat, nominally showing any hand with 16 HCP or more. Jazlese passes, and LHO bids two clubs, showing a positive response with five or more diamonds. Gideon doubles to show clubs, and RHO bids two hearts. LHO bids three clubs. RHO bids three spades. It's unclear what this bid shows. It could be a second suit or it could be a notrump probe. LHO bids four hearts, which ends the auction.

What should Jazlene lead? Partner stuck his neck out to make a dangerous double. So if a club lead is right and you don't lead one, partner may find it hard to forgive you. On the other hand, you are supposed to think. You know a lot more about the layout than partner did when he doubled. If spades is indeed a second suit, you know you have a stack. And you know dummy is hitting with a doubleton trump. A trump lead could be necessary to cut down on spade ruffs. So Jazlene chooses to lead the five of hearts.

I don't like it. I'm not talking about the heart lead itself. It's a reasonable decision. But I don't like the choice of the five. More on that later.

NORTH
Paulus
♠ J 6
J 6
A K 8 4 3
♣ 7 6 5 3
WEST
Jazlene
♠ K 9 5 4
10 7 5
Q J 10 7
♣ K J

West North East South
Jazlene Paulus Gideon Desy
Pass Pass Pass 1 ♣
Pass 2 ♣ Double 2
Pass 3 ♣ Pass 3 ♠
Pass 4 (All pass)

Declarer plays low from dummy, and partner wins the ace. What does that leave declarer? King-queen of hearts and ace-queen of spades. Declarer must have the club ace for his one club opener. So it doesn't appear we beating this. The best we can hope for is that partner has the spade ten and we take one heart and two spades.

Partner returns the four of hearts to dummy's jack. Declarer cashes the diamond ace, pitching a club, then leads the jack of spades, conceding a trick to your king. Making five.

NORTH
Paulus
♠ J 6
J 6
A K 8 4 3
♣ 7 6 5 3
WEST
Jazlene
♠ K 9 5 4
10 7 5
Q J 10 7
♣ K J
EAST
Gideon
♠ 7 2
A 4
9 6 5 2
♣ Q 10 9 8 4
SOUTH
Desy
♠ A Q 10 8 3
K Q 9 8 3 2
--
♣ A 2

A club lead would probably beat it. If declarer wins the first or second round of clubs and plays a heart to the jack, partner can win and play more clubs, promoting your ten of hearts. The only way declarer can succeed is by the unlikely play of leading the nine of hearts and floating it.

I don't subscribe to the theory that you should follow partner's lead suggestion just to keep him happy. That's not playing bridge. That's playing Keep Partner Happy. Besides, if I'm your partner, the way to keep me happy is to do what you think is right. But on this particular hand, perhaps the ten of hearts should persuade you that a club lead is right. This contract may be hard to beat if the heart ten doesn't score a trick, so maybe going after a trump promotion is the right idea. Another layout where a club lead is necessary is if partner has the club ace and the heart jack. Now three rounds of clubs promotes the heart ten.

Whatever the merits of a heart versus a club, I do think the five of hearts was a mistake. If you lead a heart, you should lead the seven. There are two reasons for this:

The first is conventional. When leading trumps, second highest from three is standard. This springs from the fact that you must lead low from a doubleton, retaining your higher spot for a possible overruff. David Burn says he once gave declarer a game by leading the five of trumps from five-three doubleton. Declarer's game going trick was a ruff with the four of trumps. Had David led the the three, declarer couldn't make it. That's an extreme example, but the principle is valid. If you lead a doubleton trump, you should lead low. It follows, then, that if you have three trumps and want partner to know that, you should lead second highest. If you lead middle, then play low, partner knows you have a third trump.

The second, and perhaps more important, reason is technical. Leading the higher of your two low spots may enable partner to retain a high trump over dummy, thus depriving declarer of an entry. This is particularly important if dummy has a doubleton trump. This deal was almost a classic example. Let's just switch a few cards around:

NORTH
Paulus
♠ 7 6
J 6
A K 8 4 3
♣ 7 6 5 3
WEST
Jazlene
♠ K 9 5 4
10 7 5
Q J 10 7
♣ K J
EAST
Gideon
♠ J 2
Q 4
9 6 5 2
♣ A 10 9 8 4
SOUTH
Desy
♠ A Q 10 8 3
A K 9 8 3 2
--
♣ Q 2

A club lead beats it, but you survive a trump lead--provided you lead the seven. If you lead low, dummy's six forces an entry. If you lead the seven, partner can withhold his queen. Declarer then has no way to get to dummy and must lose three spades and a club.

How about Gideon's actions? I wouldn't have doubled two clubs with Gideon's hand. For all you know clubs is opener's main suit. I don't relish playing three clubs redoubled if that's the case. But what can I say? He was right. A club lead beats their game, and if he doesn't double, there is no chance he's getting one.

I don't understand his trump play at trick two, however. I don't see where he thought four tricks were coming from. Couldn't partner have the club ace instead of the king? Perhaps that's even why she didn't lead one. If this is the layout:

NORTH
Paulus
♠ J 6
J 6
A K 8 4 3
♣ 7 6 5 3
WEST
Jazlene
♠ K 9 5 4
10 7 5
Q J 10 7
♣ A J
EAST
Gideon
♠ 7 2
A 4
9 6 5 2
♣ Q 10 9 8 4
SOUTH
Desy
♠ A Q 10 8 3
K Q 9 8 3 2
--
♣ K 2

a club shift at trick two beats it. Partner cashes two clubs, plays a second trump, then waits for her spade trick. Wouldn't that be embarrassing? You ask for a club lead. Partner ignores you and, instead, finds the only lead to beat it, then you let it score?

At the other table, their teammates bid naturally to four hearts and got the lead of the queen of diamonds. Declarer made five.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

Jaz Hands -- Board 10

Board 10
Both sides vulnerable

This week, we continue our discussion of the Ong-Tan vs Noervita-Sugandi match from the SEABF Mixed Teams.

You can watch Hope's discussion of Board 10 on our YouTube channel:


♠ A K 8 4   A 7 5 3   Q 8  ♣ A 6 2  

Desy opens one notrump, showing 11-14, balanced. Jazlene doubles, which she tells me they play as showing 13+ HCP. I know that's a popular agreement: double their notrump when you have the maximum of their range. But I've never understood it. I don't see what their range has to do with anything. You need just as many tricks to beat a weak notrump as you do to beat a strong notrump. If they open one notrump with six to eight HCP, I'm not doubling with eight.

Personally, I think double should show 15+ HCP regardless of their range. To be fair, I do loosen up a bit when they play weak notrumps, because you do have to worry that it's your hand on power, something you generally assume isn't true when their one notrump is strong. But I don't loosen up on the high-card points. To double a strong notrump with a mere 15 or 16 HCP, I need to have a good opening lead. I don't worry about that against a weak notrump.

In any event, Jazlene's methods are a given, so, in the ensuing auction, we must take into account the fact that she could have an ace less.

Paulus redoubles, which shows a single-suited runout and asks partner to bid two clubs. Gideon passes, and Desy dutifully bids two clubs.

My choice here would be to pass. You may have seen our video explaining my methods when I open one notrump and they interfere. If you haven't, it's worth checking out:

While I didn't say so in the video, I play the exact same methods when they open one notrump and we double.

So double here would show a doubleton club. With three clubs I pass. If LHO passes also, partner will reopen with a double if he has a doubleton club and 7 HCP or so. If he has three clubs (and not enough in high cards to be concerned about missing a game), he will pass. If LHO corrects two clubs to two diamonds and that gets passed around to me, now I will double, showing a doubleton diamond. The idea is that we want to defend if they have a seven-card fit, since this may be our last plus. If they have an eight-card fit, we want to bid, since now it is more likely that both sides can make something.

Jazlene chooses to double, which she plays as take-out. She doesn't have the right shape for a take-out double, but with four cards in each major and an ace more than she has shown, she apparently judged an offshape double was called for.

Paulus corrects to two diamonds. Gideon chimes in with two spades, and RHO raises to three diamonds.

Now what?

Can we have a game? Jazlene still has an ace more than she might. With a classic shape for a take-out double, she would have doubled even with a minimum. What do we need for game? Perhaps something like

♠ Q x x x x   K Q x   x x x  ♣ x x ?

Maybe. But Desy's diamond raise makes that hand unlikely. Her partner could be broke, so she wouldn't be raising diamonds without four of them. If Gideon has a doubleton diamond, we probably don't have a game. He would then need five spades and four cover cards. With that much, he would have bid three spades over two diamonds. So I would judge we don't have a game.

Jazlene judges differently. She bids four spades. I suspect she would have simply invited with three spades had RHO passed. But after the raise, three spades isn't a game try any more. It's simply competitive. The only way to "invite" game here is to bid it.

I'm switching directions to make declarer South. 

NORTH
Jazlene
♠ A K 8 4
A 7 5 3
Q 8
♣ A 6 2
SOUTH
Gideon
♠ Q J 5 3 2
9 8 6
5 4
♣ J 7 4

West North East South
Desy Jazlene Paulus Gideon
1 NT Double Redouble Pass
2 ♣ Double 2 2 ♠
3 4 ♠ (All pass)

Desy leads the king of diamonds; Paulus plays the deuce. Desy cashes the diamond ace, on which Paulus plays the six, then switches to the seven of spades. We have four more losers, which will put us down three. It appears they're making three diamonds. Minus 300 will be a five-imp loss. We can hold that to three imps if we find another trick.

If hearts are three-three, we can set up a heart trick if they don't get clubs going in time. If hearts are four-two, can we endplay someone? If Desy has king queen of clubs and a doubleton heart king and forgets to unblock, perhaps we can endplay her. That gives her ace-king of diamond, king-queen of clubs, king of hearts. No. That's fifteen. It seems we're stuck with Plan A.

Gideon cashes the ace and king of spades. Both follow.

What's the best way to attack hearts. If possible, it looks better to lose the first heart to Desy . A club shift rates to be harder from the West side than from the East side. So I would play a heart from dummy now. Gideon, however, judges to go the other way. He plays a trump to his hand. Paulus discards the diamond seven; Desy, the diamond three. He leads the six of heart and passes it when Desy plays the four.

Paulus wins with the heart jack and shifts to the five of clubs. The only hope now is for Desy to have the club king and to believe Gideon started with queen third instead of jack third. If so, when he wins this trick, he will be reluctant to continue clubs. Gideon plays low, Desy wins the the nine, and Gideon ducks in dummy. It works. Desy shifts to the ten of hearts. Gideon wins and plays a third heart. They split. Down two.

NORTH
Jazlene
♠ A K 8 4
A 7 5 3
Q 8
♣ A 6 2
WEST
Desy
♠ 10 7
Q 10 4
A K J 3
♣ K 10 9 3
EAST
Paulus
♠ 9 6
K J 2
10 9 7 6 2
♣ Q 8 5
SOUTH
Gideon
♠ Q J 5 3 2
9 8 6
5 4
♣ J 7 4

Gideon's play of a low club on Paulus' shift was critical. Had he played the jack, Paulus  would win with king and would have no reason not to continue clubs. Nice play, Gideon.

This should be minus three imps. Let's see what happens at the other table. West opens one diamond, North doubles, and East raises to two diamonds. That's passed back around to North, who doubles again. South bids two spades and East-West break the Law by selling out. West certainly should have competed. Responder usually has five diamonds for his raise. And, even if he doesn't, West knows the opponents have an eight-card spade fit. So it can't be right to let them play the two-level. That's a recipe for going minus at both tables. East has no reason to complete in balancing seat. He's said his piece. For all he knows, his partner is 4-4-3-2 and neither side has a good fit.

Here's the full auction:

West North East South
Peter Della Huijun Emmy
1 Double 2 Pass
Pass Double Pass 2 ♠
(All pass)

Having under-competed, the pressure is now on to beat this. East-West can make three diamonds, so they must go plus.

The defense begins just as it did at the other table: two high diamonds and a trump shift. Except that East plays ten-deuce on the top diamonds. I'm not sure what their signaling methods are. Personally, I would discourage on the opening diamond lead to show tolerance for a club shift. (Clubs not hearts, because hearts is a possible source of tricks. And only tolerance. It's not a request.) On the second diamond, I would give count. That would make the defense easy. With king-ten nine of clubs, West can shift to a low club. East will win and return one. The defense gets their club tricks in before anything bad happens.

Declarer wins the spade shift in dummy and immediately plays a heart. That's a nice play. If you don't draw trump, sometimes the opponents think it's a good idea for them to do so. The opponents don't know you have five spades, so playing a heart immediatly may make it appear you want to ruff hearts in your hand. East doesn't fall for it. He hops with the heart king and shifts to the deuce of clubs.

Unlike Gideon, he's not going to talk the opponents out of a club continuation no matter what he does. Since they need two club tricks to beat the contract, West will always continue clubs after winning this trick. Delcarer does have one chance left, however. He can hope hearts are four-two and the hand with the doubleton heart must win the club trick. If so, he can win the second club, draw trump, cash the heart ace, and exit with a club. That hand will now have to give him a ruff sluff.

If anyone has four hearts, it must be West, so declarer wants East to win the third round of clubs. Therefore he must play the jack, driving West's honor, then hope East forgets to unblock on the club return. It was correct for Gideon to duck the club shift, but Emmy must rise with the jack. He does.

West covers with the king, declarer ducks. West continues clubs, and declarer wins in dummy with the ace. No queen from East, so things are looking up for him.

Declarer cashes the last spade, plays a heart to the ace, and exits with a club to East's queen. Unfortunately for him, East has another heart. Down one.

That's minus 3 imps for the good guys.