I never stop being amazed by the freakishly good memories of top bridge players. Last week, at the European Transnational Championships in Strasbourg, I got into a lift with the Italian international Fabrizio Hugony. Looking at my name tag, he remarked: ‘I’ve played against you before. It was at the Mixed Championships in Belgium about 12 years ago.’ I was flattered – but why had he remembered me? ‘Because you asked a very strange question,’ he replied. ‘The bidding went one club, double, I bid a spade, and you asked if I was showing five spades.’ He remembered that? ‘In England people often have only four after a double,’ I said. He shook his head. ‘In Italy, never! Impossible!’
Anyway, I’m glad he got the matter off his chest after so long. As it happens, the next hand I sat down to play involved guessing exactly how many spades declarer held (see diagram).
As South, I can’t think why I didn’t open a weak 2♥️ – put it down to the heat. 4NT showed two places to play. I probably should have bid 6♣️ – but it was Pairs and I hoped 5♠️ might go down. It turned out to be a lucky view. But when I led the ♦️9, my partner won with the ♦️K, cashed the ♦️A and tried to give me a ruff. Declarer’s club now went away on the ♥️K. Could North have found the club switch? Possibly, but how could she know declarer didn’t have seven spades and the ♣️A? Chatting about the hand later to Simon Cope, he suggested a solution: with a doubleton and no trumps, lead low as if from three! If only I’d thought of that. It’s not a hand I’ll forget…for at least 12 years.
Got something to add? Join the discussion and comment below.
You might disagree with half of it, but you’ll enjoy reading all of it. Try your first month for free, then just $2 a week for the remainder of your first year.






