Trump squeeze
I declared an interesting hand yesterday at a local sectional tournament.
West
♠ K953 ♥ A2 ♦ J85 ♣ AQ98 |
East
♠ AJT72 ♥ T976 ♦ A72 ♣ J |
West | North | East | South |
— | — | — | 1♦ |
P | P | 1♠ | P |
2♦ | 3♣ | 3♥ | P |
4♠ | All pass |
South led the ♣7. Needing pitches for my diamond losers, I ducked the club in dummy, losing, as expected, to North’s ♣K. North returned a club. As planned, I pitched a diamond from my hand. Somewhat surprisingly, South followed suit with the ♣3 and dummy’s nine won the trick. I led a spade off of dummy and North pitched a club. Winning the ♠A, I advanced the ♠J. South chose to cover the ♠J, and I drew the last trump ending in dummy, cashing the ♦A along the way.
I pitched my last small diamond on the ♣A and when I led the ♣Q from dummy, pitching a heart from my hand, South, last to discard on this trick, was placed in an uncomfortable position:
Dealer:
Vul: |
North
♠ irrelevant ♥ ♦ ♣ |
|
West
♠ — ♥ A2 ♦ J8 ♣ (Q) |
East
♠ 7 ♥ T97(6) ♦ — ♣ — |
|
South
♠ — ♥ KQJ ♦ KQ ♣ — |
Seeing that pitching a diamond honor would allow me to ruff a diamond, reach dummy with the ♥A and pitch a heart loser on the established ♦J, South discarded a heart honor. I next played the ♥A and a heart to my T9. South won the trick with his last heart. I ruffed the forced diamond return and cashed a good heart for a welcomed eleven tricks. +650 was worth a factored 15.91 mps out of 17.
Although the defense might have had opportunities to perform better, the ending is interesting. I think the position is called a trump squeeze (or a ruffing squeeze?). The whole hand was:
Dealer: S (#7)
Vul: Both |
North
♠ — ♥ 843 ♦ T943 ♣ KT6542 |
|
West
♠ K953 ♥ A2 ♦ J85 ♣ AQ98 |
East
♠ AJT72 ♥ T976 ♦ A72 ♣ J |
|
South
♠ Q864 ♥ KQJ5 ♦ KQ6 ♣ 73 |