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Problem # 96  

 

                                          From                   29th November, 2006, Board 26

                                          Themes              Reading the Opening Lead

                                                                     Blocking & Unblocking

                                          Difficulty            * * *

                                          Dlr West            Both Vul            Hands Rotated for

                                                                                                Convenience

 

♠ AQ4
A986
963
♣ QJ4

 

         North

West             East

        South

East     South   West    North

                        Pass    1♣

Pass    1        Pass    1

Pass    3NT     All Pass

♠ KT6
752
AKQ7
♣ KT9

 

          

West leads Heart Three.  Plan the play.

 

You must knock out the A♣ in order to come to 9 tricks, and provided that the opponents don’t grab 3 Hearts when in with the A♣, you’ll have a chance for a 10th trick if the Diamonds are 3-3.  What is your play at Trick One?

 

SOLUTION

 

If Hearts are 5-1, it doesn’t matter whether or not we duck the first round of Hearts, in that case if the A♣ is with the long Hearts we are down, otherwise we’ll make 9 or 10 tricks.

 

If Hearts are 3-3, we can make 10 tricks by ducking a couple of rounds of Hearts, and won’t need 3-3 Diamonds.

 

But it seems more likely that West has led from a 4-card suit, and that is the case we should focus on.  One possibility is to duck a Heart, win the second round, and then play on Clubs … if the A♣ is with the Hearts it will be 9 tricks, otherwise there will 9 or 10 depending on the Diamonds.  The alternative is to jump up with the Ace at Trick One, hoping that the enemy Heart suit will block.  We are missing KQJT, and for the suit to block we will need East’s doubleton to contain two of them, so the question becomes “From which of these Heart holdings is West more likely to lead?”:

            KJ43               KQJ3

            KT43               KQT3

            QJ43               QJT3

If West has led from one of the left-column holdings, we want to rise with the Ace and block the suit.  If West has led from one of the right-column holdings, we need to duck the first round of the suit.  Which is more likely?  It’s normal with those right-column holdings to lead an honor, but, when the suit has been bid it’s sometimes not a bad idea to lead low.

 

 

♠ AQ4
A986
963
♣ QJ4

 

♠ J7
QJ43
842
♣ A832

        North

West             East

         South

♠ 98532
KT
 JT5
♣ 765

 

♠ KT6
752
AKQ7
♣ KT9

 

 

Yes, the winner was to play the A at Trick One, blocking the suit and eventually scoring 10 tricks.  Was it obviously the winning play?  Not really, but it is the play more likely to succeed, we think.  Leading low from, say, KQJ3, is quite dangerous and also not something that would occur to many players.

 

Keys to Success

   - Taking the trouble to figure out what holdings West might have led from.

   - Deducing that the best chance of success was to play the A at Trick One, blocking the suit.

 

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