Gerben42 Posted April 12, 2006 Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 After a slam try auction it always looks silly to go down in a lower contract. This is exactly the danger you face on the following hand. [hv=d=s&v=n&n=sakq52ha64dkq92ct&s=s87hq75da74caq873]133|200|Scoring: IMP[/hv] Uncontested auction starting from South: 1NT (12-15) - 2♦ (GF relay)3♣ (5♣)- 3♦ (Relay)3♥ (2335)- 4NT (Quantitative)Pass (Minimum) The lead is ♠J and you duck, hoping it was from JT9x or the like after the pinpointed doubleton in declarer's hand. No such luck, LHO leads another round and you win, RHO discarding a Diamond. How do you make this one? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Free Posted April 12, 2006 Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 I'm going for ♣ right away, planning to endplay West in ♠ and get my 10th trick from ♥Q. I need a 9th trick first, which I hope will come from ♣-♦ pressure for RHO. It's quite difficult to say how I'll play EXACTLY, since too many possibilities and inferences will occur... But at trick 2 I'll let ♣T run. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gerben42 Posted April 12, 2006 Author Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 For Frederick and others, if at trick 3 (remember you ducked a ♠ and then won the second) you lead ♣10 preparing to run it: West wins the King and returns a small Diamond (hidden) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted April 12, 2006 Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 The main problem with running the ♣10 is that, should it lose to the Jack or even if it drives out the King, you are very short of entries to establish and enjoy the ♣. But consider losing to the Jack, and back comes a ♠. I assume we pitch a ♦ but now how do we come back to our hand to play the ♣A and then guess whether the K is tripleton (exit low) or the 9 is tripleton (exit the Q)? If we cross in ♦ then even if we get the ♣ right, we will still be down. The opps will have won 3 black tricks and by exiting a ♠ (LHO) or a ♦ (RHO) they will stick us on dummy, forced to surrender a trick to the ♥ K even if it is onside. Losing to the K improves our chances: back a ♠, now we come to our hand in ♦ and establish our long ♣, but we still lose another ♣ trick: LHO cannont hold KJ9 if he won the 10 with the K, and RHO cannot have J9x or he would have covered the 10. And whoever wins the 2nd defensive ♣ trick puts us in dummy and the defence gets the ♥K. So if the ♣ 10 forces the K, we do NOT set up our long ♣: we win LHO's assumed ♠ in dummy and lead a ♥ to the Queen. If it wins or if RHO pops the K, we have 10 tricks. If it loses, we play for a minor suit squeeze on RHO. However, running the 10♣ requires misdefence, albeit perhaps easy to make misdefence: would/should RHO cover with Jxxx? We can improve our chances, if we lose the 1st ♣ to the J, by trying to get back to our hand in ♥ (assuming a ♠ exit): if the K is onside, then the opps can take it and give us our 2nd ♥ trick or duck it and lose it. If the ♥ is offside, we have compounded our problems, since they can now exit in ♥. My line: win the 2nd ♠, play a ♣ to the Q. If it loses, and a ♥ comes back, I have to duck (presumably losing) and I now play for a minor suit squeeze on east: the count will have been rectified for me. If a ♠ comes back, win, pitching a ♣ and lead a ♥, hoping for the K onside and a minor squeeze as before If the ♣ hook wins, I am up to 9 tricks and have a choice of plays for 10. I think I would exit a low ♣, pitching a ♠ from dummy: I would not want to play A and a ♣ because I am squeezing dummy. I have not worked out all of the permutations but I think the worst case depends on the ♥K being onside. I have not tried to cover all the possibilities (thus I have not discussed LHO winning the ♣K at trick 3 and making the unlikely return of a minor ;) ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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