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TALES OF AKARANA

"UNLUCKY" FOR SOME.

That’s Board 13. It was there this evening to test one’s superstitions and liking or otherwise of safety plays! Safety plays are there when there is no apparent danger in taking one…so, you be the judge!

Board 13
North Deals
Both Vul
   
Q 10 7
A
10 8 7 6 5
A K 8 5
 
N
W   E
S
 
A K 8 4
K Q 10 8 6 2
A K 9
West North East South
you   dummy  
  Pass 1  Pass
2  Pass 2  Pass
3  Pass 3  Pass
4 NT Pass 5  Pass
5  Pass 6  All pass

 Your auction may have looked something like the above. After partner’s reverse, you certainly had interest in some slam and used 4th suit forcing (3Club-small) to find out more about partner’s hand. Partner’s belated diamond support made you look at your raggedy suit as the possible trump suit. Key card revealed 0 or 3, obviously the latter, and you then asked for the trump queen and side suit kings with 5Heart-small. However, 6Diamond-small denied that queen…and so there you rested.

North led the Heart-small4 round to South’s 7 and your ace. What now? 6 tables played in 6Diamond-small, five times by West on a heart lead and once by East on the Spade-small5 lead. Views on how to play the hand seemed mixed.

In our so called “vacuum”, we lead a trump to the ace, and when no honour appears, cross back with a spade (or maybe a heart had a spade been led initially) and play a second trump to the 9, guarding against North having Diamond-smallQJxx. Great textbook reading! You may lose a trick to South but can draw the remaining trump and claim.

Yet, is this that “vacuum”? Had the unbid suit, clubs, been led, the answer would certainly have been “yes”. Yet, the lead of the first suit bid by dummy, known to be a strong hand? I would be a little nervy about losing the lead to South too early. Three West players were soon to say a very nasty word within 10 seconds of South scoring their queen on the second round of trumps:

Board 13
North Deals
Both Vul
J 9 6 3
4
J 4 3
Q 10 7 4 3
Q 10 7
A
10 8 7 6 5
A K 8 5
 
N
W   E
S
 
A K 8 4
K Q 10 8 6 2
A K 9
 
5 2
J 9 7 5 3
Q 2
J 9 6 2

 

The heart return defeated their slam. Four West declarers in 7Diamond-small required a defender to hold Diamond-smallQJ doubleton and paid a heavy price when only the Diamond-small2 and 3 appeared on the first round. The declarer in 6Heart-small was also not amused at the heart break. Only 2 of the West players in 6Diamond-small plus the one East who did not get a heart lead recorded plus scores.

I think the evidence was there that the Heart-small4 was a dangerous lead and that a couple of high trumps should be played quickly. Unless North is playing a deep double bluff game holding Diamond-smallQJxx, I do not think many players on opening lead would choose a low card in opener’s first bid suit from a holding of 2 or 3 or 4 small cards.

The world of "make believe"

Very comfortably,I blame East, of course, for the disaster that occurred as it is a seat I always avoid! What a silly third diamond to be dealt, the 9. “AK2” please next time..or if you are really looking after partner, what about AKQ!

If only West had been distracted on the opening lead and had put up the Heart-smallK from dummy, forgetting their own holding. When they woke up, they would realise they would have had to ruff a club and then lay down the top two trumps.

In the Vacuum?

I am the one, though, that is “distracted”. Safety plays are fine as long as you are in that vacuum. Unlucky for some, is board 13? Maybe a little but on reflection, those West players who took a second round trump finesse were perhaps not altogether thinking through the consequences of the opening lead.

Richard Solomon

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