Today, we’ll
look at another slam bidding sequence. Sally is the dealer and passes. Walt holds
Walt
♠ KQ7532
♥ KQJ6
♦ J3
♣ 5
That’s 12
points in high cards, but Walt decides to subtract one for not having any aces
and having just a doubleton jack in diamonds. Then, he adds 2 distribution
points for the 6-card suit and one more for the second suit. That’s 12-1+2+1,
14 points total. It’s clearly enough to open the bidding with 1 spade.
Norm and
Sally pass at every opportunity.
Edie finds
herself with this strong hand:
Edie
♠ A6
♥ A32
♦ K4
♣ AKQ987
She has 20
HCP plus 2 in distribution for the 5th and 6th spades.
Twenty-two points combined with her partner’s 13 should make a small slam. They
might even have enough for grand slam. The problem is going to be finding a trump
suit or choosing to play in NT. She doesn’t have adequate support for her
partner’s suit, but she has a strong club suit. No trump looks possible, too.
First off, she needs to show her strength. A jump shift by responder shows at
least 19 points. It’s forcing to game and is a strong invitation to slam. That
sounds like a good choice. She bids 3 clubs.
Walt has
just a minimum opening hand, but still…opposite a jump shift, he wonders if a
slam is in store. With the bidding already forced to game, there is no hurry. The
team needs to find a trump fit if they have one. Edie could easily have 4 cards
in hearts. Walt bids 3 hearts. He might want to show his extra length in spades
later if he has a chance.
Edie doesn’t
like hearts or spades for a trump suit, but her clubs will likely play well in
a NT contract. She is worried that Walt will pass if she just bids 3NT, and she
wants to be in a small slam, at least. She decides to bid Blackwood to see if
her partner has the missing ace. If he has it, she will ask for kings to see if
grand slam is possible. She bids 4NT.
Walt shows
no aces by bidding 5 clubs.
OK, so grand
slam isn’t there, but a small slam should be. Edie bids 6NT and worries a
little bit about the diamonds. There is some risk that Walt had a very distributional
hand with something like 6-6 in the majors with a singleton and a void in the
minors. OK, that is a flaw in the strong jump shift. It uses up a lot of
bidding space. Opposite most hands, though, 6NT should play well.
The opening
lead is a small diamond--the unbid suit. Edie plans the play:
Dummy
♠ KQ7532
♥ KQJ6
♦ J3
♣ 5
Declarer
♠ A6
♥ A32
♦ K4
♣ AKQ987
Edie’s worry
about the diamonds is well founded, but with the lead on her left she will take
the king either on the first trick, or later if Norm takes the ace on the first
trick. Now, she needs a plan to cash 11 more tricks without losing the lead.
Without
jumping through any hoops, she can take the AKQ of spades, the AKQJ of hearts
and the AKQ of clubs. That’s 10 tricks. She just needs a 3-2 break in spades or
a 3-3 break in clubs to set up the little cards in one of those suits. She can
just cash the winners and if one suit breaks badly, she can use the other suit
as a backup plan. It’s not 100% guaranteed, but the odds are in her favor.
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