C6 EZRE THE WASHINGTON POST.THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 , 2019
BREWSTER ROCKIT: SPACE GUY! TIM RICKARD
CURTIS RAY BILLINGSLEY
SHERMAN’S LAGOON JIM TOOMEY
RED AND ROVER BRIAN BASSET
FRANK AND ERNEST TOM THAVES
RHYMES WITH ORANGE HILARY PRICE
LIO MARK TATULLI
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE CHRIS BROWNE
BLONDIE DEAN YOUNG & JOHN MARSHALL
MIKE DU JOUR MIKE LESTER
AGNES TONY COCHRAN
WUMO MIKAEL WULFF & ANDERS MORGENTHALER
MARK TRAIL JAMES ALLEN
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM MIKE PETERS
BALDO HECTOR CANTU & CARLOS CASTELLANOS
SALLY FORTH FRANCESCO MARCIULIANO & JIM KEEFE
CLASSIC PEANUTS CHARLES SCHULZ
CLASSIC DOONESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU PICKLES BRIAN CRANE
SUDOKU
NORTH (D)
♠ K 6 4
♥ A Q
♦ K 4 3
♣ A Q 9 8 5
WEST
♠ Q J 10
♥ J 9 5 4 3 2
♦ 10 8 7
♣ 6
EAST
♠ 5
♥ K 10 7 6
♦ Q 9 6
♣ J 10 7 3 2
SOUTH
♠ A 9 8 7 3 2
♥ 8
♦ A J 5 2
♣ K 4
The bidding:
C
y the Cynic says that if at
first you don’t succeed,
there’s always next year.
When you are declarer at
a slam, give yourself every
chance to succeed.
Against today’s six spades,
West led the queen of
trumps, and when declarer
took the A-K, one of his
chances vanished when East
discarded a heart. South
next led the king and a low
club. West threw a heart —
another chance gone — and
dummy won.
South had 11 tricks and
could get another with a
winning red-suit finesse. He
went for a parlay by taking
the K-A of diamonds. When
East-West played low, South
led a heart to the queen.
Down two!
Did South play to best
advantage?
Declarer was unlucky to
fail but overlooked his best
chance. At Tr ick Five he
should lead the queen of
clubs and discard his eight of
hearts. South then exits with
a trump.
When West wins, he can
lead a heart, but South can
finesse at no cost. When
East’s king covers, South
ruffs and falls back on find-
ing East with the queen of
diamonds.
DAILY QUESTION
You hold:
♠ A 9 8 7 3 2 ♥ 8
♦ A J 5 2 ♣ K 4
Your partner opens one
club, you bid one spade and
he raises to three spades.
What do you say?
ANSWER: An average
three-spade raise for partner
such as K 10 5 4, A J 6, 3, A
Q J 9 3 will give a contract of
seven spades a 78 % chance,
so you can’t settle for less
than a small slam. To jump
to six spades would be rea-
sonable. If you judge to look
for a grand slam, as I would,
start by cue-bidding four
diamonds.
N-S VULNERABLE
NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST
1 ♣ Pass 1 ♠ Pass
2 NT Pass 3 ♦ Pass
3 ♠ Pass 6 ♠ All Pass
Opening lead — ♠ Q
BRIDGE
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— Frank Stewart
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