Wednesday 15 October 2014

Premier League 6S

E-W Game
Dealer South
  • AJ754
  • J6
  • 843
  • A62
N
W
E
S
  • KQ9
  • A1098
  • AK1095
  • K
West
North
East
South
-
-
-
Pass
Pass
Pass
1
Pass
1
Pass
2
Pass
3
Pass
3
Pass
4
Pass
4NTRKCB
Pass
52 'aces'
Pass
5NTgrand try
Pass
6
All pass


Two expert declarers in the Premier League reached 6 on this hand, but both went off on the lead of 4. South's K won the first trick, and they switched to Q.

First, some thoughts on the opening lead. The auction has been informative: declarer has five spades, three diamonds, the ace of clubs, the ace or king of spades, probably with the jack, and not much more. Dummy has five diamonds to the ace and king, four hearts to the ace, three spades to the ace or king and the queen, and a club. If that's all they've got, a heart lead will beat the contract by setting up a heart trick before declarer concedes a diamond, so long as declarer has two or three hearts. A trump or club lead may beat it too (the latter depends on who's got the spade ten), but only if declarer's got three clubs.

Making dummy a bit stronger: the contract is almost always making if dummy's got K (unless diamonds are 4-1). But if instead dummy's got K or declarer has Q, a heart still succeeds. And the heart usually wins if dummy's got Q with the king over it.

So, unless diamonds are 4-1, the heart lead is indicated from most holdings, and not much can be deduced from it.

Now how do you play?

Click here to show (or hide) the answer

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