Hold Up Play in No-Trump: When to Duck the First Trick
One of the most useful no-trump skills is hold up play. Its worth trying next time you play bridge. Build the muscle because it is such a common technique that is typically going to make you better off.
Sometimes the best way to protect your contract is to duck a trick you could win.
That feels strange at first and requires a lot of restraint. Once you start, you may begin noticing that you are making more no-trump contracts.
What is hold up play?
Hold up play means delaying your winner in a suit, usually by one or more rounds.
You are not giving up. You are timing the hand so defenders cannot continue that suit safely later.
In short: Duck now to stop them later.
Why it works
Defenders try to establish and run a long suit in no-trump.
If you win too early, they may still have enough cards in that suit to reach each other and cash many tricks.
If you hold up at the right time, you can cut their communication, so one defender runs out of that suit and cannot continue it.
Simple meaning of “cut communication”: opponents can only keep leading that suit if they still hold cards in it when they gain the lead.
Example: if the opponent on your right has the long spade suit, and the opponent on your left runs out of spades, then lefty cannot lead spades back through you when she gets in.
That often saves your contract. The opponent on lead cannot get to their partner's hand.
Typical situation
You are in 3NT. Defenders lead a suit where you hold the ace.
Your instinct says: “Win ace now.”
But pause and ask:
- If I win now, can the defender with the shorter length in the suit later reach the other defender's hand?
- Should I duck once or twice so that when I win the trick, the defender has no more left in the suit?
Very often, ducking once or even twice is best.
Lets look at some examples.
Lets say that is the led suit against 3NT. If we duck twice, and then only win the Ace on the third round, East will have no more of the suit. So, when East gets on lead, she cannot play the suit back to partner! If, however, you won the first or the second time, East would still have a spade left, and then West could enjoy cashing all those spades.
Simple rule of thumb
A practical guideline:
- In no-trump, when defenders lead their likely long suit,
- and you have a stopper (like Axx or Kxx),
- consider waiting with your winner to disrupt their ability to communicate, or simply to keep leading that suit when they get on lead.
This is not automatic every hand, but it is a strong first thought.
How many times to hold up?
If you're starting out with this idea, you can use this simple approach:
- Try duck twice, and try to remember that the goal is to leave one of the opponents with no more cards in the suit. Getting a feel for it is more important at the start than getting it right.
Its hard to give a 100% rule in one article, but we will build on this idea. For now, experiment with ducking once or twice.
Bridge is a great game where every hand is different. We can develop good guidelines, but in this context we cannot give a 100% perfect rule for how many times to duck. Try it at the table and you will already be well on your way to improving your game.
Be careful!
There are good reasons to not duck at all and take the trick straight away, the biggest one is if a switch to a different suit is more dangerous. Next time you're declaring, try to notice your weakest suit - if the opponents have not led your weakest suit, its probably a good idea to win the trick immediately, or else they might switch to your weakest one!
Final takeaway
Hold up play is a weapon that can disconnect the opponents from each other, when one opponent runs out of their suit.
In no-trump, ducking the first trick can be the move that stops defenders from cashing a whole suit. Use it with a plan, and you will save many contracts.