Cash Trumps Without Blocking: Keep Your Winners Running
One of the most common mistakes is this:
You have enough trump winners, but you cash them in the wrong order and block your own suit.
This article is about a very practical skill: how to cash your trump suit cleanly, without blocking it.
Even though we talk about trumps in a suit contract, the same idea applies when cashing any suit.
What does “blocking a suit” mean?
A suit is blocked when your winners are stranded in one hand and you cannot reach them in the right order.
You still have high cards, but you cannot cash all the tricks you should be able to cash. A lot of us have experienced the pain of that. If you haven't, you still probably will. Try to keep a smile when it happens, or even better maybe this article will help you avoid it!
Core example
Look at this trump holding:
You want to cash all your trump winners smoothly.
If you play these cards in the wrong order, you can leave a high card trapped behind smaller cards and lose control of the suit flow.
Simple rule: unblock honors in the short hand first
A good rule is:
- When one hand is short and has an honor (Kx here),
- often cash that short-hand honor early so the long hand can run.
In this example, if you start correctly, the long hand (AQxxxx) can keep taking tricks without interruption.
That is the practical meaning of “don’t block your suit.”
Why this matters? Often you want to play a suit without being interrupted - being stuck in the wrong hand. This can be a problem for many reasons, let's leave it at that.
The same concept applies when cashing side suits.
So the key method is:
- PLAY the honors in the short suit first.
- Then, once those honors have been played, enjoy playing the honors from the long suit, without interruption.
When you learn this once, it improves your whole declarer play. It makes things just flow better.
common mistakes
- Cashing the long hand first without checking for blockage
- Ignoring short-hand honors until too late
- Focusing only on “high card first” instead of “right order first”
A better thought process is: “How do I cash every winner in this suit from start to finish?”
A tiny bit of planning goes a very long way, and will make you look like you really know what you're doing!
Quick table checklist
Before cashing a suit, ask:
- Which hand is short?
- Does the short hand have an honor - if so cash it first!
Final takeaway
rule
Cashing winners is not just about having high cards. It is about cashing them in the right order.
With holdings like Kx opposite AQxxxx, think about unblocking early so the long hand can run.
Other common examples
Cashing winners is not just about having high cards. It is about cashing them in the right order.
With holdings like Kx opposite AQxxxx, think about unblocking early so the long hand can run.
Other common examples
| Example | Short hand | Long hand | Idea |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | KQx | Axxxx | Unblock short-hand honors, then run length. |
| B | KJx | AQxx | Choose order carefully to avoid stranding a winner. |
If you build this habit, of cashing the short suit winners first, your suit contracts become simpler and stronger.