All News

Daily Bridge in New Zealand

What you should know.

Sometimes a defender knows very little about a declarer’s hand. Sometimes you know or should know a lot more. Are you ready to put your knowledge into practice?

Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg 

East Deals
None Vul

A Q 7

A

A K 8 7 4 3

Q 8 6

   

N

W

 

E

S

 

J 8 5 3

5

Q J 6 5

A K 9 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

dummy

you

 

 

 

Pass

3 

Pass

4 

All pass

 

You, East, might have opened the bidding but did not. South’s pre-empt was raised by the strong North hand to game in hearts. Singleton ace is an awkward holding in the pre-emptor’s suit and is usually even worse in no-trumps than when that suit is trumps. So, 4Heart-small seemed a sound raise.

West led Diamond-small9 taken in dummy with declarer playing Diamond-small10. Declarer cashed Heart-smallA at trick 2 and led a low spade to Spade-smallK in their hand. Then they played Heart-smallQ to West’s Heart-smallK, discarding a club from dummy as you played Club-small4 (low encouraging). Before we continue the play, what is the shape of declarer’s hand?

You may not know exactly what their heart suit is but you should know the exact shape of the South hand. If you have worked it out, then you should be able to defend correctly from here-on-in.

Are you ready?

At trick 5, West led Club-smallJ and South played low from dummy. Our East made the wrong play now but then South had erred too a trick earlier. Two wrongs did mean the contract was defeated but not in the way it should have been.

East knew South had 7 hearts. They knew either South or East had no more diamonds…but which? Unless a pre-emptor had no side-suit losers, which is very unusual, even opposite that strong dummy, they would have played the second high diamond at trick 2 had they held a singleton diamond. So, it looks like it is West who has the singleton diamond.

Similarly, if South had only 2 spades (Kx), they could discard a loser on the third round of spades. They did not. If they held Spade-smallK singleton, they would have played that card before Heart-smallA.  Therefore, they must have three spades. West’s count card on the first round of spades may have told you that . Also, we should be able to assume South does not hold 4 spades. If they do, then our defence does not matter.

So, South’s shape should be known as 3 7 2 1 and they did not/could not discard their small club very quickly.

East Deals
None Vul

A Q 7

A

A K 8 7 4 3

Q 8 6

9 6 2

K J 8 3

9

J 10 5 3 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

J 8 5 3

5

Q J 6 5

A K 9 4

 

K 10 4

Q 10 9 7 6 4 2

10 2

7

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

Pass

3 

Pass

4 

All pass

 

South had made two good plays, that of false-carding with Diamond-small10 at trick 1 and of ducking the Club-smallJ because they feared East winning the lead and playing back a diamond. Alas, they had casually thrown a club on the second round of hearts…and that was to be their downfall.

East did not overtake Club-smallJ with Club-smallK and return a diamond. They left West on lead and West continued clubs. Ouch! South ruffed and continued with Heart-small10 won with Heart-smallJ and with West exiting a spade, trapping declarer in the North hand with Spade-smallAQ and a fistful of diamonds headed by Diamond-smallK. Declarer could cash the spades but West could ruff the Diamond-smallK to beat the contract.

Lessons from the hand

What lessons are there to learn? Sometimes, you can count declarer’s hand fully as East could here. The contract could not be made as long as East overtook the Club-smallJ to play a diamond. East also knew their partner held 4 hearts.

A lesson too for South. They did not need all those diamonds on the table. It probably at the time did not seem significant which card they discarded on the second trump. It should not have been but it was. You never know.

Richard Solomon

Go Back View All News Items

Our Sponsors
  • Tauranga City Council
  • tourismbop.jpeg
  • TECT.jpg
  • NZB Foundation