17th February – Board 17: Love All. Dealer North.
There were all sorts of results on the hand shown above and I think it is fair to say that most auctions ended in tears for the declaring side. The only thing that is clear is that North should open with a weak two hearts if that bid is in his side’s armoury, but what happens after that is less than obvious. Sitting East I have a suspicion that I would wheel out a convention that we talked about ages ago…..
West
|
North
|
East
|
South
|
2H
|
4D*
|
No
| |
4S
|
End
|
4D is Leaping Michaels, showing diamonds and spades, and West would surely convert to the major suit game. After a heart lead declarer should play ace and another spade, but even so the defending side should get their ruff, leaving declarer to try and make all the diamonds without loss. After ruffing the second heart South is endplayed to some extent and as a diamond switch would be fatal he does best to play the ace of clubs. Declarer will ruff and play a trump for North to win who either has to return a heart or a diamond. But by now declarer knows that North started with four diamonds to South’s two, making the finesse twice as likely to succeed than playing for the drop. If East bids 3D over 2H then West would bid 3NT and after winning the heart lead he should test the clubs first – after all an obliging defender might have started with J,9 doubleton! When North shows out on the clubs a brave declarer might take a diamond finesse against the jack later in the play on the grounds that North probably holds more diamonds than South, but it would undoubtedly require almost Superhuman Courage.
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