THE WBF TEACHERS' PROGRAM - Lesson 4 - Student Material

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Let's play a little…

Blockages

Sometimes, when a suit is unevenly distributed between declarer and dummy, there is a risk of blockage. For example with:-
in hand : K 2
in dummy : A Q 6 4

If you play the Ace first and then the 4 for the King, you are blocked in hand and cannot get into dummy to make the Queen.

To avoid that, remember the simple rule: play high and short:

 

first play the high card(s) of the short hand then the low card of the short hand to the high cards of the long hand

 

Here you play the King first (and the 4 from dummy) then the 2 towards the Ace and the Queen.

This principle also applies to establishing masters:

K 3 Q J 10 2

If you start with the 3 towards the 10, the opponent can take the trick; the situation then becomes:

K Q J 2 and the suit is blocked.

Avoid this by playing the King first.

 

Favourable splits

Sometimes a contract is only won if the missing cards of a suit are evenly split between the opponents. For example, if in a certain suit, you have in hand A 3 2 and in dummy K Q 5 4, if the opponents each have three of the six missing cards, the 4 of dummy will make a trick after you have played Ace, King and Queen.