BRIDGE
BRIDGE
Both vulnerable, North deals
NORTH
xA 10 7 5 3
uA J 9 3
v2
wQ 8 4
WEST EAST
xJ 6 4 xK Q 8 2
uK 5 4 u8 7 2
vK Q 6 vJ 9 5 4 3
wA J 10 9 w5
SOUTH
x9
uQ 10 6
vA 10 8 7
wK 7 6 3 2
The bidding:
NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST
1x Pass 2w Pass
2u Pass 2NT Pass
3w Pass 5w All pass
Opening lead: King of v
The rubber bridge session was running well into the dinner hour and South was on his third martini, perhaps explaining his aggressive bidding on this deal. We can call it aggressive if he makes his contract, or just a silly overbid if he doesn’t.
South won the opening diamond lead with the ace and led the queen of hearts, covered by the king and won with dummy’s ace. The ace of spades was followed by a spade ruff, and then a diamond ruff on the table. A heart was led back to the 10 and another diamond was ruffed. Declarer held his breath and tried the jack of hearts. It lived! South ruffed a spade back to his hand leaving this position:
NORTH
x10 7
u9
vVoid
wQ
WEST EAST
xVoid xK
uVoid uVoid
vVoid vJ 9
wA J 10 9 w5
SOUTH
xVoid
uVoid
v10
wK 7 6
South led his last diamond. West could not gain by ruffing high, so he ruffed low, over-ruffed with dummy’s queen. A spade was ruffed by South and over-ruffed, but West was forced to give declarer the king of trumps. Nice aggressive bidding! West is still wondering what happened to his third trump trick.
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