Establishing Side-Suit Winners: Honor Sequences Like KQJ10
Create an account for updated bridge info
Create an account in seconds to receive updated convention ideas, practical table tips, and new training content.
Browse topics:
Most beginners look for tricks in long suits first. That is good, but it is not the whole story.
Sometimes your extra tricks come from honor strength, even in suits that are only 3 or 4 cards long.
In this article, we focus on side-suit winners from holdings like KQJ10, and how to turn those cards into real tricks at the table.
What does "establishing" a suit mean?
To establish a suit means to force out the opponents' higher cards so your remaining cards become winners.
This can happen in long suits, but it can also happen in shorter suits if your honors are strong and connected.
Why KQJ10-type holdings matter
A holding like KQJ10 is powerful because the honors work together.
Even when the suit is not long, connected honors often:
- force out the ace,
- promote your remaining honors,
- and create one or more immediate winners.
That means you can create tricks from quality, not just quantity.
Simple example idea
Lets take a look at what these trick sources look like.
Here spades are not particularly long in either hand, but they represent a juicy source of tricks. Two tricks ready to be set up, all we have to do is put the ♠ K on the table, and we'll have our two set up tricks ready to go.
Lets put this into the context of an entire hand.
Example 1. Playing in 4♥ , you get the Q♦ lead.
On this hand you have the KQJ of spades, although they aren't all in one hand - that can make it a bit more difficult to notice! Its a great idea to play that suit, and the best order is to first cash the ♠K - cash the honor in the short hand first.
Sequence honors vs scattered honors
Compare these two ideas:
KQJ10 (connected honors)
KJ10x (more gaps)
Connected honors are easier to establish because each card supports the next one.
With gaps, your plan is less certain and may depend more on guesswork or position.
So beginners should train themselves to notice connected honor sequences quickly.
Timing: when to work on the side suit
A common declarer question is:
"Should I cash top tricks first, or establish my side suit first?"
Usually it will be correct to set up tricks in those dense side suits (3+ honors in a suit, especially connected honors).
Final takeaway
Where to next
Beginner learning path
Use this sequence to stay consistent: start with the first lesson, then move forward one step at a time.
Build the habit with guided practice
Reading helps, but trainer reps are what make bidding decisions automatic under pressure. Use the trainer to train your mind and lock this theme in.
Members unlock the full trainer library, themed problem sets, and progress tracking. Sign up first, then choose your subscription plan. Includes a 7-day free trial.