Finch Posted November 12, 2006 Report Share Posted November 12, 2006 [hv=d=e&v=b&n=sa97hq1053d9764ca3&s=shaj2dkq103cqj10875]133|200|Scoring: IMPP 1♣ 2♦ x3♠ 4♣ P 5♣all pass[/hv] 2♦ showed 5-5 (or more) in the majors, like a Michaels cue bid.West leads the King of spades, which you ruff in hand.You run the Queen of clubs to East, who wins the King He returns the ♥7 and you rise ace, and cross to the ♣A (West following)You ruff another spade in hand, and draw the last trump, West discarding a heart while dummy discards a diamond.You play a low heart towards dummy, and West, not unreasonably, ducks. East discards a spade. You now have a chance to make. The position is [hv=d=e&v=b&n=sa97hq1053d9764ca3&s=shaj2dkq103cqj10875]133|200|Scoring: IMPP 1♣ 2♦ x3♠ 4♣ P 5♣all pass[/hv] Clearly you can make easily enough if West has singleton ♦J, and perhaps that's what you should play for. But is there another layout where you can also make, with a much prettier ending? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jvage Posted November 13, 2006 Report Share Posted November 13, 2006 Nice hand, Frances, and very well spotted :) I guess you were commentating. I was playing, and since I remember the layout the problem is a bit easier. You know the distribution in the end-position, East got 4 diamonds and 2 spades, West got a singleton diamond, 3 spades and 2 hearts. In the actual layout, if you play the ♦9 from dummy an interesting position arise. If East raise with the A you must unblock the T, East is endplayed and must give you an entry to dummy (spade A or the free diamond-finesse). In this case you make if West got either 8 or J singleton. If East plays small you let the 9 run, felling the singleton 8. You now cash the spade A for your heart-discard and set up 2 diamond-tricks, also making. It seems as East can succeed by a very anti-intuitive defense. If he covers the 9 with the J (from AJ52) it seems like declarer is in trouble. But declarer can counter even this, he plays a high diamond, which East must duck to deny dummy an entry. Now declarer changes tack and plays his last heart. If West wins he is forced to give declarer a dummy-entry in a major, and the 2 last diamonds can be discarded. I was East, at my table N/S overbid to 6♣. After a diamondlead and ruff (I returned the J, to make it clear that a heart was an unsafe return) we scored 300 (not as great a result as it looks, since our teammates went down a couple in 3NT). One reason I remembered the diamond-layout was that declarer was complaining a little about the bad breaks, and was jokingly told that at least the diamond J was finessable (there is a very social atmosphere in our premier league). John Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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