And then... they learned Bridge. And as wanting to excel was deeply rooted in their character – they found themselves arguing and accusing each other when things went wrong at the bridge table. That brought a bitter taste to their relationship. They wanted Bridge to be a shared passion, an activity they would enjoy together, as a team. They both loved the game, but... they also loved each other... And so they decided to play with different partners. That way they could still go play at the club together, discuss the hands, compete with each other and still enjoy the game.
Today they both played very well on this hand: Tim was West, defending, and Edith was South as declarer.
Dealer South, North - South Vulnerable
Tim, sitting West, lead the ♠6. Declarer took with the ♠A,
played ♣AK, ruffed a third Club in dummy and then played a Heart to the
♥J.
Tim paused to think: He then saw the possibility of locking declarer in
dummy and promoting his ♥10. So
he ducked this trick and allowed South to win with the ♥J.
Declarer continued with the ♥K.
Tim won with his ♥A and played his second Spade. Declarer won with
the ♠K but now he had no entry to hand to pull West's last trump.
He then tried a Diamond – but East took the ♦A
and played a third Spade. Declarer is in trouble now.
No matter what he does – the ♥10
will make a trick: If he ruffs low – West overruffs. If he ruffs with
the ♥Q – West discards and the
♥10 is good. If he throws a
Diamond – West, too, discards a Diamond and East continues with a fourth
Spade to promote the ♥10.
Tim was very pleased with his defense and thought there was a good chance
to finish first in today's tourney.
At the end he went with his partner to see the scores. Edith
was already standing by the board with her partner.
Tim was a little disappointed. They were in second place after the couple he just
set in 4♥ (Edith was in third). But he got over it quickly and said to his partner (loud enough so that Edith
could hear too):
"Well, did we set the winning pair in 4♥?
YES, we did! And did we score better than my wife? Yes, we did! So... I'm happy".
Edith didn't remain silent:
"Which 4♥ did you set? The cold, unbeatable 4♥?" After 2 seconds
it was clear they were indeed talking about the same hand:
"You wouldn't manage to set me. I also got a spade lead, but I used my bridge vision to foresee the threat of a trump promotion, in case trumps
are 3-1. So I won the first trick with the ♠K in dummy, played ♣AK, ruffed a club, and played a heart to the ♥J.
West tried to hold up once, like you did, and took his ♥A on the second round of hearts. He continued with another spade as you did, but I
simply won it in hand and cashed his last trump. I lost only two Diamonds and the ♥A".
Seeing Tim's long face, Edith's partner piped in:
"Come on, Tim, don't look so miserable. You are fortunate in real life
too to have a wife with such a vision..."
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