This article was taken from Andrew's What Should Have Happened Book
The chess player’s motto - “When you have found a good move, see if you can find a better one” is equally applicable to bridge. Here West’s defence was theoretically sound - he had made a clear signal to partner. But East, as partners can be, was blind or ignorant, and the contract was allowed to make. East’s fault? Yes - but only in part. West had an idiot-proof way to defeat the contract. Cover up East and South’s hand and see if you can find it.
South Deals E-W Vul |
♠ J 8 7 6 ♥ Q J 10 ♦ K Q 6 ♣ K Q 6 |
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♠ 4
♥ A K 8 4 3 ♦ A 8 7 4 ♣ 10 8 7 |
|
♠ Q
♥ 9 2 ♦ J 9 5 3 2 ♣ J 9 5 3 2 |
|||||||||
♠ A K 10 9 5 3 2 ♥ 7 6 5 ♦ 10 ♣ A 4 |
West | North | East | South |
1 ♠ | |||
Pass | 4 ♠ | Pass | Pass |
Pass |
4 ♠ by South |
West led ♥A and East remembered to signal with ♥9 to encourage a continuation. West duly played ♥K and carefully led ♥8 to the third trick - a “suit-preference signal” for partner - after trumping - to return the higher ranking of the other suits - here ♦s. If West had wanted a ♣ return, he’d lead his lowest ♥ to the third trick. Such signals are most useful in trumping situations - but only if partner is aware of them. Evidently this East was not, for after much agonising and mental coin-tossing, East returned ♣3. Declarer gratefully won ♣A, led ♠A, and cashed dummy’s ♣KQ discarding ♦10. Contract made.
West criticised East for failing to obey the suit-preference signal, but West had an idiot-proof defence - he should simply have cashed ♦A before leading the third ♥ for East to trump.
ANDREW’S TIP: A victorious defence is better than a victorious post-mortem!