Photo: Jonathan Zander
Yes, that's Delicate Arch in southern Utah, but today we're talking about Declarer's Arch. Or more accurately, Declarer's ARCH; it's not in Utah.
Playing matchpoints, nobody vulnerable, you are the dealer.
♠ K Q J 10 x x ♥ -- ♦ K Q 10 x x ♣ Q x
S (you)
|
West
|
North
|
East
|
1 ♠
3 ♦
3 ♠
|
2 ♥
Pass
Pass
|
Pass
Pass
4 ♠
|
Pass
3 ♥
All pass
|
West leads the ♦7.
North
|
♠ 9 8 x
♥ x x
♦ A 9 8 x x x
♣ x x
|
South (you)
|
♠ K Q J 10 x x
♥ --
♦ K Q 10 x x
♣ Q x
|
West leads the ♦7. Your play?
ANSWER: Which card you play here doesn't matter much. But did you remember to ARCH ?
THE PRINCIPLE: Before playing to the first trick, take a few moments to think the hand through. A handy checklist is the acronym ARCH: Analyze, Review, Count, How.
ANSWER: Which card you play here doesn't matter much. But did you remember to ARCH ?
THE PRINCIPLE: Before playing to the first trick, take a few moments to think the hand through. A handy checklist is the acronym ARCH: Analyze, Review, Count, How.
- ANALYZE the lead; Is it from an honor sequence, or fourth best from length, or a doubleton, or a singleton, or something else?
- With only the J and 7 of diamonds missing, it looks like a singleton ♦7.
- REVIEW the bidding: Did the opponents bid or not, and what does that suggest about the shape and values of their hands?
- West overcalled hearts at the two-level, and East raised only under duress. West didn't bid 4♥. Most of the missing high cards (and there are lot of them!) must be in West's hand. East has long hearts and almost nothing else.
- COUNT your tricks: At suit contracts, it's usually more effective to count losers; at notrump, count your winners.
- I have a spade loser, two club losers, and maybe a diamond loser but only if West led the 7 from J 7, which doesn't seem likely. Making four looks good, and there's a chance for five.
- HOW will you play: Plan at least a general strategy before playing to the first trick. Will you draw trumps, postpone drawing trumps in order to cross-ruff, try to set up a side suit, or ?? That strategy may affect your play to the first trick.
- I will lead spades to punch out the ace, when I get back in I'll draw the remaining trumps and run the diamonds. If they don't take both of their club tricks right away, I'll discard a club loser on dummy's sixth diamond. If I play the Q♣ smoothly to the first club trick maybe they'll be persuaded to switch to hearts instead, and I make an overtrick.
Druid Arch, photo: J. Benjamin Wildeboer