Gerben42 Posted May 24, 2006 Report Share Posted May 24, 2006 [hv=d=s&v=n&w=st7ht853d5ckqt954&s=sakj53hkdkt942c32]266|200|Scoring: IMP[/hv] Auction: West North East South ------- ------- ------- 1♠ Pass 1NT 2♥ Pass3♣ 3♦ 4♣ 5♦5♥ Dbl Pass PassPass You lead ♠A and find this dummy. How do you defend? *Adv+ please answer in hidden* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Finch Posted May 24, 2006 Report Share Posted May 24, 2006 As I've got leads on the brain at the moment: will partner give attitude or count on this lead? At first glance this looks like cash two top spades, then the king of diamonds, then play a third spade. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted May 24, 2006 Report Share Posted May 24, 2006 Can we safely assume no 3 card ♠ fit by partner? We don't know if this is a 4 card major system or a 5 card one, nor whether 1N was forcing. I want to assume that partner holds no more than 2♠, but I am learning to be aware of cultural bias :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gerben42 Posted May 24, 2006 Author Report Share Posted May 24, 2006 Your system is BBO Basic, so partner does not have 3♠ for his 1NT bid. In principle he will give attitude, if you want to lead the King for count I'll allow that too. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ArcLight Posted May 24, 2006 Report Share Posted May 24, 2006 Since we know pard has 2 (or maybe 1) Spades, we don't need Attitude or Count. So pard can signal suit preference, though that can be confusing depending on his/her spots if they are adjacent and low or high. (Ex: 34 its hard for us to decipher a signal). ♠ Ace♠ King assume pards carding order is suit preference. Hi-Low = Dimes. Low -Hi = Clubs if its hi-low, cash the ♦ King, and play the 3rd round of ♠.(avoid Declarer playing dime as a loser on loser) If its low-hi, just play the 3rd round of ♠. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sfbp Posted May 24, 2006 Report Share Posted May 24, 2006 I'm not adv+, so I'm gonna post as is.... Declarer has 3+ clubs for sure. And 4 spades. If you could be sure that partner holding the Q of spades would play it on the first round (which I would be because I led the K not the A) then it looks safe enough to attempt to promote pard's ♥J. ♠♠♠, then. He might not have the ♥J though. ;) However if pard has a minor suit ace it only matters if it is ♦A (pard will always get the ♣A). Even then it might get ruffed. So no rush to lead clubs if pard has ♣A. Assume for a moment the defence's only asset is the ♥K. Declarer having either void or A in ♦, pard is 2-2-7-2 (declarer is 4-6-0-3) and not even a Jack in his hand outside ♦. If you lead a ♣ now declarer can take it in dummy and finesse ♥. So, suppose I switch to a club at trick 2. Is declarer smart enough to play the ♥A at trick 3, because I switched to clubs? If declarer is 4-5-0-4 (with AQJ9x) then you gotta lead a club NOW.If partner has singleton ♣A, even better. But even a small singleton makes it difficult for declarer. If declarer is 4-5-1-3 then declarer has to play the A of hearts first to make his contract. If pard has as much as Jxx the J will make when you get in with the second spade as you can NOW go for the overruff. Declarer cannot drop Jxx so he has to get to dummy. Leading a club only loses when pard has exactly Jx in ♥, and declarer has a losing diamond. Now declarer lays down AQ of ♥ and runs the clubs. Game over. But PARTNER doubled 5♥. Why? Because he needs a club lead. Duh where was I wasting time the last 5 minutes breathing heavily......? I lead a ♣ immediately. Down 2. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gerben42 Posted May 25, 2006 Author Report Share Posted May 25, 2006 The defender who actually had this problem played ♠A, ♠K, ♠, ruffed with the ♥10 and not overruffed. Then declarer played a ♥ to the Ace, dropping the King. He then claimed he was so unlucky. Instead, after cashing ♠AK, play ♦K next. Declarer will not find your ♥K when he ruffs the ♦ (he was 4504) since he thinks your plan was to stop declarer from discarding his ♦ loser on the 3rd round of ♠. Moral of the story: If you see that declarer is about to go wrong, avoid leading him to the right path. Now if ♦K holds it gets trickier. If you now lead a ♣ declarer may see through your plan so you might just as well try out if partner has a ♥ honor after all (even though that seems unlikely). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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