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The opening lead is very important – that one card can convey so much information to partner, it sets the tone for the whole contract. Look at the normal traveller – it specifically has a column for the lead. This one card can often explain the triumphs or disasters associated with the contract.
This bridge bidding cheat sheet is ideal for beginners. Have it handy while you are playing your bridge games! The left hand column shows Opening Bids. The middle column shows the corresponding Responding Bids. The right column shows the Opener's rebids.
Hand 1. OPENING LEADS. Your decision for the opening lead is in two parts: (a) what suit (b) what card. If partner has bid, you normally lead that suit; small from 3 or 4 to an honour, highest from doubleton honour and highest if no honour. This holds for both suit contracts and no-trump contracts.
OPENER’S REBIDS. BALANCED HANDS (Point Counts Shown are High Card Points) See responses to opening bids of one of a suit. Give a single raise with 4 card support for responder’s suit. Show a 4 card major at the one level. Otherwise rebid NT at the lowest level. Pass if the response was 1NT.
Bridge - bid and play techniques, with prepared hands. Quizzes, crib sheets, opening leads
The proper opening lead depends on the cards you hold as well the type (Suit/No Trump) and the level of contract to be defeated. Any information gathered from the bidding (from bids made and NOT made) of your partner and your opponents will also guide you in your decision. The TWO decisions to make (in sequence) are: 1.
Opening Leads. There are 2 considerations to opening leads: which suit (more important) which card. Which Suit to Lead (in order of preference) partner’s suit – one of my cardinal rules is always lead your partner's suit. You never lose the post mortem by leading partner's suit.