Mark Horton

Hard Day’s Night

After a tough day at the table and doubtless a restless night’s sleep as the deals continue to occupy your thoughts what better way to get your brain back into gear for today’s contests that to tackle a couple of problems over breakfast. Try these two from the final of the BAM teams:

  East
    6
    10 8 5 4 3 2
    A K 8 6
    10 4

After two passes you decide to open 3 and the auction proceeds as follows:

West North East South
Pass Pass 3 3♠
Pass 3NT All Pass  
       

What do you lead?

Let’s say you opt for a top diamond (in expert circles the ace asks for attitude).

   
   
   
   
   
  East
    6
    10 8 5 4 3 2
    A K 8 6
    10 4
  South  
A K J 9 4
A 7 6
Q J 9
J 9

The first trick is completed by the nine, two (discouraging) and three. Now what?

Here is the full deal:

Dealer:

Vul:

North  
7 5 2
K Q J
10 7 4 3
K 6 5
West East
Q 10 8 3 6
9 10 8 5 4 3 2
5 2 A K 8 6
A Q 8 7 3 2 10 4
  South  
A K J 9 4
A 7 6
Q J 9
J 9

If you do anything other than play a club declarer can get home. For example, suppose you switch to a heart. Declarer wins in hand and knocks out the king of diamonds. He wins the return in dummy, cashes a top spade, unblocks the diamonds, comes to hand with a heart and cashes the ten of diamonds.  With all the vital black cards West has no defence.

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