pclayton Posted November 15, 2007 Report Share Posted November 15, 2007 You reach 3N after RHO opened a weak 2♠: [hv=d=e&v=b&n=skhj3dak86432cqt3&s=sq92hakq72dj9c762]133|200|Scoring: MP[/hv] The opponents are not very reliable. LHO leads the ♠8 won by RHO who returns the ♠10. Do you win? If you duck, RHO continues with another and LHO follows (see what I mean?) Plan the play. Remember its MPs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
karlson Posted November 16, 2007 Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 While this may well not be the field contract, and making it should be a fine score, it looks like the only extra chance for 9 tricks is if the ♣AK are onside. Since I think that's less likely than 2-2 diamonds, I'll just win trick 2 and try to take 12 tricks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jlall Posted November 16, 2007 Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 I would of course not duck the spade as I may take the rest and I fear a club shift. I would just play the ace of diamonds then the king of diamonds, no heroics for me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted November 16, 2007 Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 OK. Not much here to analyze, but there is something. I also will win the second spade. However, I need to play a card from dummy. I do not want to pitch a heart. That would snip communications if the diamond Ace fells the stiff Queen. I do not want to pitch a club, because that kills my remote chance of catching LHO with something like ♠xx ♥xxxx ♦Qxx ♣AKxx. If he has that, I'll eventually take five heart, one spade, two diamonds, and one club, for nine tricks. They will cash one spade, one diamond, and two clubs. Adds up for making. (I do not know when I win trick two that LHO has a third spade; RHO might have ♠AJ10xxx ♥xxx ♦x ♣xx and be timid.) I do not want to ditch a diamond. If the diamonds come in, we lose trick one, win trick two, win the next six diamonds, and then win four hearts. We lose trick 13 if hearts split 5-1 unless (1) RHO strangely has five hearts and the AJ10-whatever in spades or (2) LHO has the fifth heart and both the Ace and King of clubs. A small heart pitch seems worst. Thus, it seems that I must decide first whether to maximize chances of making this contract at all costs (ditch the diamond) or whether the contract and initial defense is obvious, or what impact the uncertainty as to contract and initial defense might have. Then, I must evaluate the relative frequency of the non-squeeze 5-1 heart split and the relative frequency of the club honor concentration plus the 2-7 spade split. Plus, I'm concerned about that club 10 and all the inferences to be gleaned therefrom, weighed against the extremely remote possibility that RHO is playing a really deep game falsecard to suggest that club honor, and not duck the first spade for that matter, with seven spades in his hand. Wow. I suppose I just ditch the club, but these are the sorts of silly problems that sometimes drive partners of mine crazy sitting as dummy across from me for intolerable minutes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pclayton Posted November 16, 2007 Author Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 Maybe this is a better hand at IMPs. Thats basically what I did, but the opponents were weak and I wanted to try to pick up some Q-T combos on my left so I plunked down the ♦J. I got a lightning duck and should have floated it but I popped and got the 10 on my right. If I would have chose to come back to my hand with a heart, floated the D9, returned to the ♥J I would have wrapped 9 ricks, but its MPs and I wanted to take 12 tricks if diamonds broke, not to mention avoiding a disaster if the diamond lost to QT. -100 was about a 60% board by the way. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenrexford Posted November 16, 2007 Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 The diamond Jack play at trick three is an idiot-exposing play. It seems more likely that you will catch a stiff Queen to the right than an idiot cover by leftie from Q75. And, you know that you are not flying him round, no matter how long the hitch. Once you saw the 10, maybe the return to finesse makes sense. But, that snips your heart communications. Good cause for a falsecard from 10x by RHO, eh? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jlall Posted November 16, 2007 Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 Phil no offense but I think your play of the jack of diamonds was horrible. If RHO drops the queen, or if lho covers and the ten doesn't drop you have no idea what to do anyways. If RHO drops the queen you're probably going to be committed to playing for QT since if they had stiff Q you have already pitched several tricks, so you are going to lose to stiff Q altogether and break even against QT. If it's stiff Q onside you obviously have blown it as well. If they cover with the Q you have to guess whether to play for QTx or Qx, and either way you play it you will lose to one of those combinations. So essentially you aren't going to gain anything and are risking a lot. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jlall Posted November 16, 2007 Report Share Posted November 16, 2007 As far as ken's post, just pitch a club from dummy dude. RHO opening 2S with AJTxxxx and a stiff is just not very likely. You are going to feel stupid if you pitch a diamond and hearts go 5-1 (which seems way more likely to me). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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