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...He could now return to hand via a spade ruff and draw one of West’s trumps before cashing heart winners. West scores J♣, but that is all....
...If — as here — East holds the master trump, declarer can score J♣ “en passant”, ruffing when East fails to ruff, or discarding his spade loser when, as he did, East ruffs in....
...BiddingDealer: NorthLove All West led J♣ instantly; South indentified five losers: two diamonds, two low hearts and A♠....
...He wins, draws trumps, and ruffs J♥ in dummy. He leads 2♣ and, when East plays small, he puts in J♣ and this holds....
...He pulls the final trump, crosses to J♦, and ruffs a third spade with his last trump....
...West led 7♣, taken with dummy’s J♣. Perhaps South can overcome a 4-1 trump break if there is a singleton honour, but these thin contacts usually require some decent divisions....
...Since A♥ is his only entry — and he may require a ruff — declarer sets about his plan before drawing trumps. He leads A♦ and 3♦....
...Having drawn trumps, cash ♦AK and exit with J♦. East will win and, unless he leads a club, he will proffer a ruff in dummy and a discard of 5♣ from hand....
...South put in J♠ and, when West won with A♠, declarer had successfully negotiated all the obstacles. Paul Mendelson’s new book, ‘The Joy of Bridge’, is out now...
...Now, declarer’s carefully preserved 3♠ comes to the fore: overtaken in dummy with 4♠, and J♦ cashed, on which South can pitch a low heart. Still in dummy, a heart can be led towards K♥....
...If West could win, and he plays a heart, it provides a ruff and discard; if he leads a diamond, K♦ is the 10th trick; a club sorts out the suit for only two losers. At the table, East wins....
...Dummy trumps are high, bar A♠, so any potential over-ruff need not be feared....
...The beauty of South’s play was this: even if West wins the third club trick with J♣, declarer was safe. What could West lead?...
...Let’s say that East rises with 10♦, J♦ is played and West wins with K♦. If he leads another diamond, it runs to declarer’s ♦A9; if he opts instead for a spade, this runs to South ♠KJ....
...At trick two, South ducks East’s Q♣; West does not ruff. East continues with J♣; South plays K♣ perforce, West will ruff and switch to a spade....
...Q♠ and a spade ruff in hand followed, eliminating the suit. Now, South led his final diamond....
...The best line is to win West’s J♦ lead and play a small trump from both hands. You win whatever is led next and play A♠, cash ♥AK, and ruff a heart in hand....
...With everything else done, South leads 10♥ from hand and, when West follows low, declarer runs it, losing to East’s J♥. Now, East is endplayed: she leads a heart back or provides a ruff and discard....
...The deduction makes sense: if East leads a heart, West will surely be unable to ruff high ahead of dummy’s J♠ and this will indicate that East holds Q♠....
...South now ruffs a diamond in dummy and leads a fourth spade. East should ruff in, declarer over-ruffs with J♥, and West is stymied....
...Without going full J-Lo, Eldridge suggests a milder version, where you might “define your lip shape with a liner a touch darker than your lipstick”....
...East hops up with A♦ and leads J♦. Declarer should play low, preserving his winner; he is blissfully unconcerned whether West ruffs with Q♥ or not....
...She played a club to dummy’s ace, cashed J♠, discarding 5♦ from hand, and then played back to her K♣. With the black suits eliminated, she now led a third round of trumps; East won....
...IDEA, £65 Correction: The picture accompanying the book by LL Cool J is of Dr Dre, not LL Cool J as was originally captioned....
...Rising with A♦ in hand, South can lead J♣, and East wins now or later. Winning in dummy with K♦, declarer can now lead a top club and, when East ruffs low, he can over-ruff....
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