by Rowen Bell, Chicago IL
Here's an interesting matchpoint defense problem, taken from the Friday afternoon pairs game at the November 2006 Turkey Bowl sectional in Aurora IL.
As West, you
hold: KQJ6
T74
5
JT942
Your opponents arrive at 3NT by South after an uncompetitive and artificial strong club auction. Your left-hand opponent, North, has shown 16+ points and has suggested holding 5+ hearts. South has shown 8-11 points with six or more diamonds and exactly four spades, and he has denied heart support.
You make the
normal lead of the K
and dummy hits with
843
AQJ62
A
AQ87
On your spade
lead, partner plays the 7
and declarer the
2.
You continue with the
Q,
producing the
9 from
partner and the
5 from
declarer. What do you lead at trick three?
* * * *
From the bidding,
you know that South is left with the A10
after the first two tricks. Consequently, if you play a third round of spades
into his tenace, that presents South with an additional spade trick, one which
he could never take if left to his own devices.
Nevertheless, a spade is the winning continuation at trick three. The full deal was:
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At teams, North-South should reach 5D, which is an easy make (a second heart
trick can be established for the 11th winner). At pairs, however, it is
reasonable for North-South to play 3NT, hoping that the blockage in diamonds
will not be fatal.
If West leads
anything but a spade on trick three, then North can win with dummy's ace, cash
dummy's other two aces, return to hand with the A
and run the diamonds. This gives South 10 tricks and a good board, beating the
pairs in 5D.
Watch what happens if West plays a third round of spades instead. This presents South with a second spade trick, true; but it also forces South to use up his only entry to hand before the diamonds have been unblocked.
South's counter
to this defensive thrust is a jettison play: After winning the third round of
spades, South plays a fourth round of spades, discarding dummy's A.
Now, South can attempt to run the diamond suit.
If diamonds were splitting 3-2, then South would have 11 tricks, and the third round of spades would have given East-West a bottom board. However, with diamonds failing to split, it is North-South who are on the path to a bad board.
After cashing
three top diamonds and finding that the suit won't run, South's best play is to
throw East in with a diamond on trick eight.With five tricks to play, dummy is
left with AQJ
AQ, and East has to
make a lead from
K98
or
K5. The reader may
verify that no matter how the play proceeds from this point, declarer will end
up with four of the remaining five tricks. This gives South only nine tricks,
tying the pairs in 5D and losing to pairs who were in 3NT and received any other
defense.
Is it reasonable
for West to find the "Greek gift" defense of continuing spades at
trick three? Perhaps. West knows that diamonds are splitting badly for declarer.
West also knows that if South's diamonds are strong enough to be a source of
tricks, then South will not hold either of the rounded-suit kings; hence, the A
is South's only entry to hand and needs to be attacked, even at the cost of a
trick.
On the other
hand, the spade play could work out badly for West. If South's diamonds were
slightly stronger -- say, if the 10
and
8 were
interchanged in this layout -- then the spade play would hand declarer an
undeserved eleventh trick. Also, if South's diamonds were weaker, then declarer
might be scrambling to find nine tricks on a misfit hand, and the additional
spade trick could give declarer the contract.