Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bridge

BY PHILLIP ALDER

How should South play in four spades against the club-two opening lead to the nine and three?

East was tempted to support diamonds, but the adverse vulnerability dissuaded him.

Oblivious to the danger, South immediately played a trump to his 10 and West’s king. Trusting his partner to have given a suit-preference signal at trick one, West shifted to the diamond three. After winning with the king, it wasn’t difficult for East to give his partner a club ruff. The trump ace was the defense’s fourth trick.

South grumbled about the odds against finding West with three trumps, but North wasn’t impressed. He had noticed a perm that was a cut above the rest.

“Why not play a heart to the king at trick two?” began North. “Continue by overtaking the heart queen with dummy’s ace and lead the heart 10. If East covers with the jack, you’ll have to ruff and hope for the best. But when he plays a low heart, you can discard your singleton diamond. It’s a classic Scissors Coup, snipping the communication between the defenders. West never gets his ruff, so your contract makes.”

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2021-07-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://edition.timesfreepress.com/article/281938840956271

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