Wednesday, February 16, 2005 10:30 AM
Hand Evaluation – Visualization (
Killing The Board )
PITBULLS:
There are some defensive strategies that come up so often in Bridge that they have labels attached to them. One is the “dummy lock” which is self evident by its
name & “killing the dummy” is
another. Taking away an entry early is an obvious strategy to kill the board. The
most simplistic killing the board technique is to make the dummy ruff so you
have more trump than the dummy. Patterns assist us in finding these common defensive plays . Lets
discuss the “killing the board” strategy as a number of examples have come up
in play recently. I was playing against the Bartons , the auction went
1♠-P-2♣-P We lead
the diamond Ace , the board hits with ♠x ♥Jxx
♦xx ♣AKQJ10xx . We
2♥-P-3♣-P continue
with the diamond king & everybody follows. Now what ?
Patterns again
3♥-P-4♥-P . are the answer .Declarer is probably 5-5-2-1 so lead a club to “kill the
board”. The club comes too early for declarers liking as the trumps are not
drawn. Lee tried to recover by playing more clubs hoping that the long hand
would ruff in but to no avail. Lee overruffed my trump , played the Ace & King of trump but my partner
had Qxx so bye bye dummy. When
we do not switch to a club , Lee plays AK of trump and
runs clubs until partner ruffs in for –620. Timing
is everything.
Susan was in 5♣ recently with
“killing the board”
again the defense du jour. You hold ♠A98xxx ♥Qx ♦KJx
♣xx , Susan has
indicated a very long club suit on the bidding. You lead the heart queen , the board comes down with ♠KQJ10 ♥Kxx
♦xxxxx ♣K . Susan plays small , your queen wins so what is
your next play ? The only entry to the spades is the trump king so “kill the
board” by taking away that entry
prematurely. You switch to a trump , Susan leads the
spade king with partner signaling two
spades. The hand can not be made now. What if you continue hearts ? Susan ruffs , leads a
spade you win the Ace & continue a spade. Susan discards a diamond &
leads another spade . I ruff with Qx
of clubs , Susan over ruffs. Back to the club king
drawing my last trump so Susan cashes the last spade for +600.
Good defenders quite often “kill the
board” with their choice of opening leads.
1♠-P-2♦-P The 3♦ bid was alerted
as not forcing , I held ♠Axx ♥xxx ♦xx
♣AJxxx . With a trump
2♠-P-3♦-P control I decided to “kill
the board” by leading a diamond. ♠xx ♥xxx
♦AKQJxx ♣xx .
4♠-P-P-P Declarer won the diamond , led a spade which I ducked . Declarer lead another spade so I won my Ace & returned a diamond.
The dummy was dead so we received +200 instead of –650.
The most common “killing the board”
strategy is leading a trump when you have
most of the HCP’s & you
know the boards pattern. My partner held a nice 16 HCP hand ♠AKQx ♥KJ10xx ♦Kxx
♣x & opened a heart. LHO bid 2NT vul , I bid 3♥ . RHO bid 4♣ , my partner bid 4♥ which brought 5♣
which was doubled by me & ended the auction. OK ,partner
shows about 8 HCP’s for crawling in at the 3 level. You have 16 + 8 = 24 so the
opponents are in a 16 HCP , 11 trick game. Where are
their tricks going to come from ? If you say by ruffing ,
go to the head of the class. You
lead a trump , the board comes down with ♠x ♥x
♦AJxxxx ♣AJ987 . Declarer has ♠xxxxx ♥xxxx ♦void ♣KQ10x . He needs 3 ruffs to
establish the diamonds plus entries to get back and forth. This is impossible
so he goes two down for +500. My partner did not lead a trump nor switch to a trump so -750 was the result. Timing is everything when you are trying to
“kill a board”.