| 
    
    Ruffing -
                
                In the basic ruffing tactic, the declarer 
                plays the side suit, perhaps several times by regaining the lead 
                in declarer’s hand, making good use of the dummy trumps to ruff 
                losers. Using the basic ruff makes sense when the dummy’s main 
                feature is a short suit opposite declarer’s losers in the 
                respective suit.   
                
                Imagine West leads the Heart Ace, takes a quick look at the 
                dummy and switches to a trump on trick two.  Opponents are on the 
                right track, trying to minimize dummy ruffing power.  On this 
                hand, we clearly are best ruffing two of the remaining three 
                Heart losers using dummy’s two trump.  We have plenty of Diamond 
                entries back to the declarer’s hand and continue ruffing.  Doing 
                so, we lose 1 Club and 2 Hearts.  Should we mistakenly draw trump 
                immediately (opponents are usually 3-1 or 2-2 with four 
                (outstanding cards), we end up losing four Hearts and at least 
                one Club.  What a difference! But let’s say you aren’t blessed 
                with a 5-3 trump fit.  Even with a 5-2 fit, our ruffing 
    tactic may be still be the best bet.  
                West leads the Heart King to our Ace.  If we draw trump we 
                would ultimately lose three Heart tricks.  And similar to the 
                prior hand, we begin by ruffing the second Heart, come back to 
                our hand with the Diamond Ace (not the long Club suit).  Now we 
                can ruff a second Heart with the remaining trump in dummy.  Now 
                is the time to draw the opponents’ trump.  Using the ruffing 
                strategy, we could make 12 tricks, a small slam, while we only 
                make 10 tricks if we initially pull trump instead of ruffing.
                 
                On hands like the two above, our path was clear. The declarer 
                never really had any other tactics, promotion or finessing, to 
                develop extra tricks. Now let’s try a variation that is a bit 
                trickier.  
                West leads the Club King, won by your Ace.  You cash your 
                Heart Ace and ruff a Heart in dummy.  With both your Aces gone, 
                what next?  That depends!  Did you ruff in the dummy with the 2 or 
                a top honor?  If you planned ahead and ruffed with either the Ace 
                or King, you’ve learned to plan ahead and appreciate the 
                importance of transportation! Doing so, you could then play the 
                Spade 2 and overtake the trump in your hand, providing a 
                valuable entry to allow a second ruff in the dummy.  After all, 
                your side has all the top trumps so it wasn’t wasteful to ruff 
                with a high trump. There is no getting around losing two Club 
                and one or two Diamonds, depending of whether the Diamond 
                finesse wins (if West holds the Diamond Ace).  However we would 
                like to avoid losing even one Heart trick if possible.  Here the 
                key point is, consider entries in addition to the ruffing in 
                dummy. For our last hand, we will only have a 4-4 trump fit.  Could a ruffing 
                tactic be successful?  
                East leads the Diamond Queen – we can see this hand requires 
                some planning.  From the declarer’s perspective, the losers might 
                be one Spade, two Hearts, one Diamond, and two Clubs – totaling 
                six losers.  If the contract was 4 Spades, we need to hold our 
                losers to three tricks.  Again, ruffing in the dummy short suit 
                provides a winning strategy. However, this time we can afford to 
                first play two rounds of trump just in case South has a 
                singleton Diamond (see Rule of 1).  And 
                since we have all the top honor entries to get to our declarer 
                hand, there’s no worry that an opponent will get in and lead a 
                trump to reduce dummy’s ruffing power.  So after drawing two 
                rounds of trump, we win the Diamond Ace, cash the Club Ace, and 
                ruff a Club.  Now back to our declarer hand playing a low Heart 
                to the Heart King and ruff the remaining Club in our hand. Next 
                we play the Diamond King and a third Diamond – assuming the 
                opponents’ Diamonds are 3- 2, we are okay losing either a 
                Diamond trick and a Spade or two Diamonds if opponent wishes to 
                use their last trump in that manner.  So if all works well, we 
                lose one Heart, one Spade, and one Diamond – nicely done.  |