Devil's coup
The Devil's Coup is a declarer play in contract bridge that prevents the defense from taking an apparently natural trump trick - often called "the disappearing trump trick".[1]
Example
♠ | A 9 | ||||
♥ | 3 | ||||
♦ | — | ||||
♣ | — | ||||
♠ | Q 4 | N |
♠ | J 3 2 | |
♥ | 7 | ♥ | — | ||
♦ | — | ♦ | — | ||
♣ | — | ♣ | — | ||
North to lead | ♠ | K 10 7 | |||
♥ | — | ||||
♦ | — | ||||
♣ | — |
A typical example is shown where spades are trumps and the lead is in dummy (North).
The ♥3 is led. If East ruffs low, then declarer overruffs low and cashes the ace and king of spades. If East ruffs high, declarer overruffs with the ♠K and finesses West for the ♠Q to make the remaining two tricks.
Devil's coups are very rare: not only the trump suit but the side suits must lie well for declarer. In practice, declarer might well decide to play the ace and king of trumps earlier in the hand, in an attempt to drop a doubleton QJ.[2]
gollark: Can Macron do the opposite of sorting?
gollark: ↑ evidence of historic Macron implementation
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Bronze_Age_collapse
gollark: 2033.
gollark: Or something relating to that.
See also
References
- Francis, Henry G.; Truscott, Alan F.; Francis, eds. (2001). The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge (6th ed.). Memphis, TN: American Contract Bridge League. p. 114. ISBN 0-943855-44-6. OCLC 49606900.
- Dorothy Hayden, Winning Declarer Play, Robert Hale & Co, 1969, p119-120, ISBN 0-7091-1501-6
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