Rusinow leads

Rusinow leads is a bridge convention used as part of defensive carding. Rusinow leads are commonly used only on the opening lead against a suit contract; nevertheless, some experts use Rusinow leads only against notrump.

They were devised by Sydney Rusinow and used by him, Philip Abramsohn and Simon Rossant in the 1930s, but were banned until 1964 by the American Contract Bridge League.[1] [2]

Application

Using Rusinow leads against a suit contract, the second highest honour card is led from touching honours against a suit contract. So from KQ94, a player using Rusinow leads would lead the queen. This eliminates the ambiguity of the more traditional lead of the king against a suit contract where the partner of the leader may not be clear whether his partner has the ace or the queen.

Accordingly,

If the touching honors to be led are doubleton, the top card should be led. Then when the second honor is played, partner will know that the leader has no more of that suit.

With more than two honors in sequence, the second highest is still led (queen from K-Q-J, etc.), followed by a lower one in most cases. These leads blend nicely into Middle Upside Down (MUD) leads of second highest from three spot cards.

Rusinow leads are used only on the first trick against a suit contract in a suit partner has not bid. Later in the hand, or in partner’s suit, the highest card should be led from touching honors.

See also

References

  1. Neil H. Timm, Ph. D. (2 July 2012). 2/1 Game Force a Modern Approach - Third Edition: With New Chapters on Precision for Beginning and Intermediate Players. Trafford Publishing. p. 275. ISBN 978-1-4669-4383-4.
  2. Manley, Brent, Editor; Horton, Mark, Co-Editor; Greenberg-Yarbro, Tracey, Co-Editor; Rigal, Barry, Co-Editor (2011). The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge (7th ed.). Horn Lake, MS: American Contract Bridge League. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-939460-99-1.
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