免费av毛片,日韩av高清在线播放,97国产精品最好的产品,欧美成人免费一区二区三区,神马午夜一区,曰河南少妇对白视频,欧美自拍视频

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文

How well do you spot the spots?

By Phillip Alder ( China Daily ) Updated: 2017-01-21 11:18:57

How well do you spot the spots?

[Photo/China Daily]

Mark Twain said, "I was born modest; not all over, but in spots."

One aspect of bridge that separates the top players from others is taking full advantage of the useful spot cards (2 through 10)-in particular, knowing when a low spot is a winner.

How is that relevant in today's deal? After West leads the club king, how should South proceed in four spades? Did West have a more successful opening lead?

South's jump to four spades was a slight overbid with a six-loser hand, but we tend to bid game with any excuse. Of course, here, if South had chosen to rebid three no-trump, North would surely have passed, and declarer would have had nine top tricks. (Also, there was a case for West's making a takeout double over one spade, not a two-club overcall. It would not have made much difference here, but the double would have been more flexible.)

In four spades, though, South has only those same nine tricks; he is faced with four losers: two hearts, one diamond and one club. Is there any hope?

Look at those interesting club spots. Declarer should win the first trick, draw trumps and return the club nine. Suppose West finds the best defense, taking the trick and shifting to the heart queen. South wins on the board, leads the club 10 and discards a heart loser. Yes, West takes that trick and cashes a heart winner, but South's diamond loser evaporates on the now-high club eight.

If West had led anything other than a club, the contract would have failed.

Editor's Picks
Hot words

Most Popular
...