"When I'm your partner, the secret to this game is to Help Stupid Partner." -- Steve B.
E-W Vul
|
♠ | 7 6 | ♥ | A K 5 4 |
♦ | K Q 7 6 |
♣ | K 10 9 |
|
|
|
|
♠ |
Q J 4 2 | ♥ | 9 8 |
♦ |
J 9 5 3 | ♣ | J 5 2 |
| |
West |
North |
You |
South |
1
♠ | Dbl |
2 ♠ |
4 ♥ |
All pass | |
|
|
You considered bidding 3 ♠ (weak, preemptive) over North's takeout double, but
decided to go low at unfavorable vulnerability.
Partner led the ♣ A. Your partnership agreement is to lead king from
ace-king. Partner's ♣ A thus denied the king. Of course you knew that already,
the king is in dummy!
At trick two partner plays the ♠ K, almost certainly from the ace-king of spades.
Which spade do you play at trick two?
ANSWER: Play the queen of spades, promising the jack. Don't send a boy to do a woman's
work! If partner has a six-card spade suit, you
won't get any more spade tricks, but at least let partner know that you have
the ♠ J just in case it matters.
Next, partner played the ♠ 2; you won with the ♠ J as declarer followed low.
What do you lead at trick four?
ANSWER:
Lead a club. Partner is screaming for a club ruff. How do you
know that the ♣ A was a singleton? There are several clues here:
- Aces are made for capturing kings and queens. We usually don't lead an unsupported ace at trick one unless we are looking for a ruff. It's
possible that partner started with ace-doubleton of clubs and was hoping you
might have the king of clubs. But it's also possible that partner had a
singleton ace; yes, that means that declarer has a six-card club suit, but it
is possible.
- Partner could have started with the safe play of the two top spade honors. She
didn't need to lead the ♣ A "to get a look at dummy." A top spade honor would
be the normal lead and accomplish the same thing, but partner chose to do something abnormal. That makes another clue pointing toward a singleton ace of clubs.
- Partner led the ♠ 2 -- the lowest possible spade -- indicating preference for
the lowest-ranking suit (clubs).
THE PRINCIPLE:
When signaling encouragement in a suit, play the highest card you can afford. Don't send a boy to do a [wo]man's work.
From touching honors,
always signal with the highest honor, promising the next highest honor.
If you do not make it clear to partner that you have a spade entry, she will give up on her club ruff objective. She will instead cash the ♠ A, then the ♦ A. Unfortunately for you, declarer will ruff the diamond, draw trump, and run her good clubs to make the contract. The same thing will happen if you lead a diamond from your side.
E-W Vul
|
♠ | 7 6 |
♥ |
A K 5 4 |
♦ |
K Q 7 6 | ♣ | K 10 9 |
|
♠ | A K 9 8 3 |
♥ | 3 2 |
♦ | A 10 8 4 2 | ♣ | A |
| |
|
|
|
♠ | Q J 4 2 | ♥ | 9 8 |
♦ | J 9 5 3 | ♣ | J 5 2 |
|
|
|
♠ |
10 5 |
♥ |
Q J 10 7 6 |
♦ | — | ♣ | Q 8 7 6 4 3 |
|
-- Ray