Here are
the West and East hands and the bidding; you are sitting West:
West
ª Q632
© AJT
¨ AKQ
§
KQ4
|
East
ª
AKT
© 753
¨ T964
§
A76
|
South West North East
P!
P 2N* P 4N**
P 6N All
Pass
!
I would open this hand with three quick tricks, even though there are only 11 High
Card Points. The bidding would then go 1C-1S-1N-6N because West would figure
East with a minimum of 12 HCP for the opening bid. Adding his 21 HCP to 12,
that’s 33 HCP and clearly a slam opportunity.
*20-21
HCP
**Asking
to bid 6N if at the top of his bid, pass if at the bottom. Since West was at
the top, 21 HCP, he bid 6N. With 32 HCP, slam should be tried; with 31, it’s a
longshot without a long running suit.
Opening Lead 8§
You’ve got 10 tricks, AKQ of spades and diamonds and
clubs and the ace of hearts. Where do you get the other two? If the jack of
spades is a doubleton and it drops on the AK, you’ve got another spade because
that makes the 10 good, or if spades split 3-3 you’ve got your 4th
spade trick. That’s two chances for your 11th trick. If you lead out
the AKQ of diamonds and the jack falls, that’s another. Considering the odds,
let’s say that half of those work. You still need another trick. The only place
to get it is to finesse twice in hearts. The question is, what do you do first?
The
opening lead gives you the answer right off the bat. You must try the heart
finesse first. You know that your Left Hand Opponent (LHO) does not have both
the king and the queen of hearts. If he did he would have led the heart king,
top of connecting honors. So Right Hand Opponent (RHO) is finessible, either
holding both of the heart honors or one. Because of the opening lead, you know
he has at least one of them. The reason why you must try the finesse first is
that let’s say you lead out the AKQ of diamonds and the jack doesn’t fall. That
means that when you take the heart finesse and it loses, the jack of diamonds
will be another winner and if the winner of the finesse has that card, you are
down. When you take the finesse first and lose it, you don’t have a sure loser
to lose because you still have control of the diamonds.
After
you take the heart finesse and it loses to North, you may then confidently lead
out your AKQ of diamonds to see if the jack falls, which it didn’t. Then go to
the board and take your AK of spades. If the jack doesn’t fall, take the heart
finesse to your hand, which works because, as you knew, the honors were split,
and hope that spades break evenly by leading the queen. As it was, the jack was
a doubleton and when it fell, the spade 10 was good so your queen of spades was
your 12th trick, 3 diamonds, 4 spades, 3 clubs and 2 hearts.
This
hand was played eight times in a club game consisting of experienced players, mostly Life Masters, and everyone but one person played
it wrong. Interestingly, only four found the slam. The other four were in 3N,
making 5. Two of those in slam were down one; one was down two and one made it.
Here’s the four hand layout:
North
ª
9754
©
K2
¨
J732
§
853
|
||
West
ª Q632
© AJT
¨ AKQ
§
KQ4
|
East
ª
AKT
© 753
¨ T964
§
A76
|
|
South
ª J8
© Q9864
¨ 85
§
JT92
|
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