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...A low club to K♣ allowed a second heart ruff, and a club to A♣ accessed the third ruff. With Q♣ not falling, the plan now requires reasonably balanced distribution....
...BiddingDealer: SouthLove All West led J♠; declarer counted four potential losers in his hand: a spade, a club and two diamonds....
...East overtakes the lead with A♠ and returns J♠. When this holds the trick, he switches to 10♣. Declarer rises with A♣ and reflects on the play to date....
...Paul Mendelson’s new book, ‘The Joy of Bridge’, is out now...
...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...
...Morgan Entrekin, chief executive of Grove Atlantic, the publisher behind last year’s Booker prize-winner, Paul Lynch’s Prophet Song, agrees. “The boom in [romantasy] has been amazing,” he says....
...West led J♥; declarer assessed four losers. However, dummy’s K♦ can provide a discard for a club loser, with 10♠ as an entry to the table....
...If West mindlessly plays low on the first round of clubs, South’s ninth trick would be scored....
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...If, as he should, he leads a small club, play low from hand, running it to dummy’s queen. This wins, and 4S is made. Paul Mendelson’s new book, ‘The Joy of Bridge’, is out now...
...When West passes, North’s forced 2D response promises nothing, but South must hope that North holds something to make game a good shot: a couple of low spades, plus K♥ or J♣ make it pretty much lay-down....
...He resigned from his club, saying: “I don’t want to belong to any club that would accept me as one of its members.” Rea StavropoulosLondon NW5, UK...
...West led J♣; South faces a loser in each of other suits and, crucially, the fourth round of clubs too. Can you foresee what might go wrong?...
...The club’s executive chairman is one Daniel J....
...Originally there was a wonderful music hall on Chiswick High Road I used to go to. And I love the antiques market....
...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....
...The solution is to lead a club towards dummy before drawing any trumps....
...Now, each declarer played the club suit in the usual way: leading low from dummy and putting in J♣ from hand. This lost to West’s Q♣ and the contract was down....
...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?...
...Declarer cashed A♥, A♣, and exited with a club. West won and, with nothing but spades remaining, had to lead one. 3NT+1 equalled a great result....
...He returns a club each time he wins....
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