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Opening lead is the least liked part of bridge. This is the consequence
of a sad fact that most players lead poorly. And much as
we are able to tolerate or even get to like shortcomings of our character,
accepting intellectual weaknesses goes against human nature.
Hence aversion to defensive play, observable at every stage of bridge
development.
To be sure, good players lead better than weak players, but the level
of opening leading always lags behind declarer play or bidding skills. It
is therefore common for many players to treat hands in which they defend
with some sort of impatience. In the next deal we will bid to a distributional
slam or a light game, or we will pre-empt opponents out of
their optimum contract – in a word, we will perform a number of brilliant
moves bringing us a lot of points or money and providing us with
an opportunity to show the real strength of our play. For the time being,
however, we have to defend. The contract seems cold, declarer looks as
if two overtricks were just a matter of time, and so we lead through
dummy’s strength, or lead trumps, or the highest from a sequence, because
this is what routine tells us to do. If, by some unfortunate decree
of fate, in a match or a rubber game we constantly get worse cards than
the opponents or we defend more often than we declare in a tournament,
we routinely let the tricks go time and again on the opening lead,
complaining about the bad luck and restlessly waiting for a better hand.
How much more proper and, most of all, more efficient attitude would
be to prove by means of successful defensive play that it is not only the
cards we are dealt but also, to a considerable degree, the abilities we
possess, what influences the result.
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