IMPROVE YOUR PLAY

with Larry Matheny

 

Bidding too quickly has caused many headaches.  It pays to slow down and imagine how the auction might continue.  In this hand, declarer avoided a problem by following this sound advice.

 

Scoring: IMPs (Teams)

#12-04

Dlr

N

Vul

N/S

S

A102

H

QJ962

D

AK62

C

2

S

K4

H

A87

D

109853

C

A85

http://northerncoloradobridge.com/images/pad.bmp

S

 Q986

H

 K1054

D

 QJ

C

 974

 

S

J753

H

3

D

74

C

KQJ1063

West

North

East

South

 

1H

   Pass

1NT*

Pass

2D

 Pass

3C

Pass

Pass

Pass

 

 

 

 

 

  *forcing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BIDDING:  South’s first reaction was to respond 1S to his partner’s opening bid, but instead stopped to anticipate the rest of the auction.  He soon realized that if his partner made the very likely rebid of 2D, he would have no good bid.  Since he wanted to show a weak hand with a long club suit, he avoided the “One Spade Trap” and instead made a forcing 1NT response.  North did indeed rebid 2D but now South could show his weak hand and long suit.  North wasn’t crazy about passing but trusted his partner.

 

 PLAY:  West led the ten of diamonds to dummy’s ace.  Declarer led a club to the king and West’s ace.  Declarer won the diamond continuation and led a low heart won by West.  East ruffed the third diamond with the nine in an attempt to promote a trump trick for his partner.  But, declarer over ruffed and two more rounds of clubs took care of the trumps.  Declarer now led a low spade to the ten and ended up with nine tricks: 2 spades, 2 diamonds, and 5 clubs. 

 

This was a gain of 6 IMPs as the N/S pair at the other table failed in a spade partscore.

 

Copyright ©2012 Larry Matheny