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WellSpyder

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When did you last see a trick made up of 5, 4, 3 and 2 of the same suit in that order? (I imagine 2, 3, 4, then 5 might be quite a bit more common.)

 

This was a hand from Division 2 of England's Premier League yesterday:[hv=pc=n&s=saq98ht98765dj3c8&w=sjt6543haq4dcq654&n=sk2hkj3dakt9652ca&e=s7h2dq874ckjt9732&d=w&v=b&b=4&a=2sdp4hp4np5dp6dppd6hdppp&p=sjs2s7sqh5h4h3]399|300|[/hv]

2 was a constructive weak 2 (about 8-11 HCP). 4N = RKCB(?), 5 = 1 or 4 key cards. 6 was not completely obvious, but intended as choice of slams and south eventually passed. Now west came up with a Lightner double requesting a lead - a particularly dubious choice given that he would actually have been on lead against 6! North decided 6 might be safer, and east doubled for his own reasons (perhaps he was confident Q would be a trick).

 

West led J, and south led a "low" . When west carelessly played low himself, he found 5 wasn't so low after all when it won the trick! Note that 5 wasn't just led for effect. If declarer leads 10 west might realise that he ought to go up with A! Now he can return a . Declarer's only way back to hand to repeat the finesse is by overtaking K. But now there is no way back to dummy to cash the winning s after establishing the suit with the marked ruffing finesse...

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