K 10 5 A 6 4 K J A Q 9 6 2 |
A J 9 4 K Q A Q 10 9 J 5 3 |
West | North | East | South |
1NT | |||
Pass | 6NT | Pass | Pass |
Pass |
West leads theJ. Plan the play?
Some players are bigots about their finesses. You’ll never find them refusing a finesse it one is handy. Often their prejudices will cost a game or slam. The finesser loses little time with this layout. He wins hisQ and leads a club to dummy’s queen for a losing finesse. East exits with a heart and South now tries to set up the clubs, but West’s discard announces the bad news. South then misguesses theQ and the slam goes down one amid the usual declarations about bad luck. A much better way to play the clubs is to refuse to finesse on the first round. Instead, declarer leads a club to dummy’s ace and comes off dummy with a low club. East must duck and South’sJ wins. With the club position revealed, South takes a losing spade finesse into the non-danger hand and winds up with 12 tricks without ever losing a club trick.What if West held the stack in clubs?
It would have been even easier. South would lead a club to the ace as before, and a club back to his jack and West’s10 would be trapped by dummy’sQ-9 and the slam would be made with a proven finesse. SAFETY PLAY: A way of handling a suit combination to give the greatest chance of required number of tricks in the suit at expense of abandoning the possibility og gaining extra tricks. Source: The Bridge Player’s Dictionary by Randall Baron. The full deal:K 10 5 A 6 4 K J A Q 9 6 2 | ||
Q 8 7 J 10 9 7 2 7 6 4 2 7 | 6 3 2 8 5 3 8 5 3 K 10 8 4 | |
A J 9 4 K Q A Q 10 9 J 5 3 |
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