About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 44. Chapters: Bridge coups, Bridge leads, Bridge probabilities, Bridge squeezes, Suit combinations, Squeeze play, Simple squeeze, Criss-cross squeeze, Finesse, Safety play, Progressive squeeze, Double squeeze, Single-suit squeeze, Entry-shifting squeeze, Simultaneous double squeeze, Non-simultaneous double squeeze, Signal, Ruff, Principle of restricted choice, Vacant Places, Play techniques, Opening lead, Knockout squeeze, Saturated squeeze, Trump squeeze, Pseudo-squeeze, Triple squeeze, Shooting, Entry squeeze, Alcatraz coup, Morton's fork coup, Card reading, Backwash squeeze, Tempo, Duck, Clash squeeze, Grosvenor gambit, Forcing defense, Trump coup, Belladonna coup, Bath coup, Compound squeeze, Percentage play, Holdup, Stepping-stone squeeze, Rule of 11, Deschapelles coup, Endplay, Avoidance play, Trump promotion, Vice squeeze, Strip squeeze, Coup en passant, Journalist leads, Loser on loser, Cannibal squeeze, Rule of 10-12, Merrimac coup, Crocodile coup, Guard squeeze, Smother play, Scissors coup, Suit combination - 10 missing, Winkle squeeze, Uppercut, Suit combinations - K10 missing, Devil's coup, Vienna coup, Suit combination - J missing, Rusinow leads. Excerpt: In the partnership card game contract bridge, a suit combination is the holdings of one suit in declarer's and dummy's hands. The holdings in two opposing hands are unknown; one suit combination covers all possible lies of the remaining cards in those two closed hands. A bridge deal diagram usually shows dummy at the top, North, and declarer at the bottom, South. The given diagram shows a suit combination with seven hearts in dummy and four in declarer, or a "7-4 fit." The two opposing hands hold only two hearts, the king and ten. There are four possible lies of those two cards; the suit combination and its diagram implicitly include all four. The term suit combinat...