Finch Posted April 2, 2006 Report Share Posted April 2, 2006 So I was playing a KO match (48 boards, aggregate scoring) on April the 1st, and as usual I seemed to have a problem in 3NT.[hv=d=s&v=b&n=sxxxhaxxdxxckj108x&s=sxxxhkqxxdakjcaxx]133|200|1NT P 3NT all pass[/hv] (by the way, at aggregate scoring you have to be insanely aggressive when it comes to bidding vulnerable games) West leads the King of spades, and they cash four rounds of the suit, RHO having Axx. On the fourth spade, RHO will discard a neutral-looking diamond. What's your plan, and what do you discard from each hand? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted April 2, 2006 Report Share Posted April 2, 2006 Best is to discard a heart from dummy and a club from hand. Now cash three rounds of hearts. If hearts break you can combine chances (♣Q falling or ♦Q onside). If not, cash the top diamonds and play for ♣Q on. This seems slightly better than just playing for ♣Q on, mostly because the squeeze chances force LHO to come down to Qxx most of the time in order to guard a red-suit winner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted April 2, 2006 Report Share Posted April 2, 2006 Dummy is easy, a ♣ (♥ might very well do it also). Problem comes in hand, I think I woudl discard a club as well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cherdano Posted April 3, 2006 Report Share Posted April 3, 2006 I would keep a club in hand, and just play for ♣Qxx or Qxxx with LHO. This loses to Adam's line if hearts are 3-3, the diamond queen is falling, and club queen is off-side, but wins when LHO has ♣Qxxx and no red suit guard to keep. Arend Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Finch Posted April 10, 2006 Author Report Share Posted April 10, 2006 Well, this generated a great deal of interest...I thought it was worth a fair amount of thought at the table, anyway. It doesn't matter much what you throw from dummy, but you seem to have two options from hand: i) Keep all 3 clubs (and if so, I think you should throw a diamond, not a heart: if hearts are 3-3 you can then choose who to play for the CQ). You are now making if LHO has the CQ to any length, or RHO has singleton Queen, plus minute extra chance (hearts 3-3 and you correctly choose to play RHO for the CQ). ii) Throw a club from hand. You are planning to cash hearts next, and if they are 3-3 take the AK of clubs followed by, if the CQ doesn't drop, the diamond finesse (or in some cases a show-up squeeze). Compared to (i) you lose when LHO has Qxxx or Qxxxx in clubs, but gain when hearts are 3-3 are RHO has CQx, or hearts are 3-3 and RHO has the rounded queens. I haven't worked out the odds, but they seemed quite close at the time. Anyway, at the table it didn't matter, because the full layout was: [hv=n=sxxxhaxxdxxckj108x&w=skqjxhjxdqxcq9xxx&e=saxxh10xxxdxxxxxxc&s=sxxxhkqxxdakjcaxx]399|300|[/hv] I discarded a club from hand, and LHO, who didn't fancy opening up a red suit, switched to a club. I put the 10 in and was not best pleased when RHO discarded (as I had 9 easy tricks if I'd kept all 3 clubs in hand). All was not lost, however, as after winning the club in hand with the ace, cashing 3 hearts, playing a club to the Jack and the king of clubs, RHO was show-up squeezed in the red suits and I could drop the DQ offside. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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