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The Belladonna coup is the play of a low card away from an accompanying high card, giving the opponents the impossible choice between setting up a winner for declarer and abandoning an attack on another suit. The provenance of the following spectacular hand, which illustrates the Belladonna coup, is uncertain. A similar layout, with the same key play, is discussed by
Victor Mollo Victor Mollo (17 September 1909 – 24 September 1987) was a British contract bridge player, journalist and author. He is most famous for his "Menagerie" series of bridge books, depicting vivid caricatures of players with animal names and ma ...
.Mollo, Victor. The Bridge Immortals. Hart, 1968. Both sources attribute the coup to Giorgio Belladonna, for many years a cornerstone of the Italian Blue Team. (Belladonna later said that he could not recall having made the key play.) It is said that Belladonna played it as described in a European Community championship in Belgium during the 1980s. But it is also said that Paul Lukacs, the game's pre-eminent composer of single-dummy problems, composed it away from the table. Against South's 4, West leads a small trump to East's 10 and South's J. South has several ways to play for ten tricks, which include finding the A onside (50% probability of success), or finding the diamonds 3-3 (36%). The best prospect is to ruff a heart in dummy, but the attack on trumps jeopardizes that plan. If South mis-times the play, the defense can manage to lead three rounds of trumps ''and'' win the K, before declarer can ruff the third heart. Instead of relying on the position of the heart ace or a favorable diamond split, South played for the nearly sure thing by taking a
safety play Safety play in contract bridge is a generic name for plays in which declarer maximizes the chances for fulfilling the contract (or achieving a certain score) by ignoring a chance for a higher score. Declarer uses safety plays to cope with potentiall ...
in hearts. South led to dummy's K and played the 6 away from the K! This gave the E-W an impossible choice: Notice that South gives up the best chance of making a heart trick (leading toward the K). By giving up the chance for one trick in hearts, South virtually guarantees ten tricks (now only a very unlikely defensive minor suit ruff can defeat the contract). Notice the presence of the
avoidance play In contract bridge, avoidance play is a play technique whereby declarer prevents a particular defender from winning the trick, so as to eschew a dangerous lead from that hand. The dangerous hand is usually the one who is able to finesse through decl ...
theme in this deal.


See also

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Morton's fork coup Morton's fork is a Coup (bridge), coup in contract bridge that forces an opponent to choose between #letting declarer establish extra tricks in the suit led; or #losing the opportunity to win any trick in the suit led. It takes its name from the ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Belladonna Coup Contract bridge coups