Helping partner …
I missed a defensive opportunity at today’s club Swiss. See if you can do better.
Dealer: W #16 Vul: EW |
North ♠ K743 ♥ A5 ♦ 832 ♣ Q542 |
West ♠ QT86 ♥ T832 ♦ A954 ♣ 9 |
West | North | East | South |
P | P | 1♦ | P |
1♥ | P | 1NT | All pass |
2♦ | All pass |
Partner led the ♠A. I discouraged, thinking that our finding a heart ruff is the best route to setting the contract. Partner did lead a heart to my ace and I returned a heart to his jack. Partner now led the ♥K. If we win this trick, we will have won the first four tricks.
What is your defensive plan with my hand?
….
At the table, I let the ♥K hold, and everyone else followed suit. After due consideration, partner led the thirteener heart, looking for a trump promotion.
Looking at a diamond holding that did not lend itself to effecting a trump promotion, I should have ruffed partner’s good ♥K in order to cash the ♠K and then lead a third spade hoping that partner had led the ♠A from a doubleton.
The whole hand was:
Dealer: W #16 Vul: EW |
North ♠ K753 ♥ A5 ♦ 832 ♣ Q542 |
|
West ♠ QT86 ♥ T832 ♦ A954 ♣ 9 |
East ♠ J95 ♥ Q74 ♦ KT76 ♣ AKT |
|
South ♠ A2 ♥ KJ96 ♦ QJ ♣ J8763 |
Partner’s play of the thirteener heart was a good play: Had I held KT of diamonds, this would be the winning play, as I can ruff with the ten for our fifth trick and our combined ♦K opposite ♦QJ will produce the setting trick. This gives declarer a hand such as Kx, Qxx, xxxxx, AKT, consistent with the auction at our table. We lost 7 IMPs on this hand, since partner’s hand balanced 3♣ at the other table and our teammates went on to 3♦. When declarer misguessed trumps, that was down two for -200 at their table and -90 at ours.
Hey Jeff, I was a little worried that ruffing the good heart would lead to declarer picking up partner’s Qx of trumps, so I thought of pitching the CQ to try to get my message across. Depending on the partner your recommended play might be better…after all he is much more likely to have led from Ax than Axx.