Fluffy Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 IMPs, EW vul ♠A109876♥84♦J♣10854 ♠K542♥A105♦K7♣AK62 1NT-2♥3♠-4♠p lead is ♣Q. Plan the play. Hidden: spades.... are 2-1 ♦J.... won't be covered Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
655321 Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Win the club, then ♠K and Ace, then run ♦J. Assuming this is a misguess (and LHO doesn't help us by playing another club), we can eliminate the red suits, after which we are in dummy. Now play a low club from dummy, and either rise King and play towards the T (if RHO shows out), or duck the club (if RHO follows), losing a heart, a diamond and a club. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nige1 Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Thanks, Fluffy. Fascinating deal. My guess: Win ♣K, ♠KA, Lead ♥. If RHO follows small, then finesse ♥T and claim. But a cunning RHO plays a ♥ honour so you win ♥A.You cross to ♠T and hopefully lead another ♥.Bad luck. Nasty RHO wins with another ♥ honour and leads a ♦. You duck (unless RHO led ♦Q) but cruel LHO wins with ♦Q and exits in a red suit. Making the best of a bad job, you ruff LHO's return eliminating one red suit.Anyway, you guessed it: When you lead a ♣, RHO covers dummy's card and LHO shows out.You take your last despairing chance:You win ♣A to lead your red honour, discarding a ♣. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jlall Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Win the club, then ♠K and Ace, then run ♦J. Assuming this is a misguess (and LHO doesn't help us by playing another club), we can eliminate the red suits, after which we are in dummy. Now play a low club from dummy, and either rise King and play towards the T (if RHO shows out), or duck the club (if RHO follows), losing a heart, a diamond and a club. Aren't you missing the entries to strip the red suits if you do this? Like if the DJ loses to the queen they play a heart you duck they play a heart you win and ruff a red card and you still have one red card left. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jlall Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Thanks, Fluffy. Fascinating deal. My guess: Win ♣K, ♠KA, Lead ♥. If RHO follows small, then finesse ♥T and claim. But a cunning RHO plays a ♥ honour so you win ♥A.You cross to ♠T and hopefully lead another ♥.Bad luck. Nasty RHO wins with another ♥ honour and leads a ♦. You duck (unless RHO led ♦Q) but cruel LHO wins with ♦Q and exits in a red suit. Making the best of a bad job, you ruff LHO's return eliminating one red suit.Anyway, you guessed it: When you lead a ♣, RHO covers dummy's card and LHO shows out.You take your last despairing chance:You win ♣A to lead your red honour, discarding a ♣. Yeah this seems good but if RHO exits a low diamond you are supposed to pop king I think. Depends on their level etc, but I would expect them to generally shift to the queen if they had it and they're good (though if they know you will pop king they should shift to low from queen empty in case you have KT since you should pop K then also... blah blah). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andy_h Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Win the club, then ♠K and Ace, then run ♦J. Assuming this is a misguess (and LHO doesn't help us by playing another club), we can eliminate the red suits, after which we are in dummy. Now play a low club from dummy, and either rise King and play towards the T (if RHO shows out), or duck the club (if RHO follows), losing a heart, a diamond and a club. Aren't you missing the entries to strip the red suits if you do this? Like if the DJ loses to the queen they play a heart you duck they play a heart you win and ruff a red card and you still have one red card left. That's what I thought first then realised if ♦J loses to the queen and they switch to a heart, win the first heart, ruff a diamond and exit a heart. Then they're forced to complete your elimination. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
655321 Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Yes, the point being that the defenders cannot play clubs, so they have no choice but to help with the elimination. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nige1 Posted September 27, 2009 Report Share Posted September 27, 2009 Yes, the point being that the defenders cannot play clubs, so they have no choice but to help with the elimination. Curses! But well done 655321 and andy_h! :)And great problem, Fluffy! :)I spent ages on this and still got it wrong :( Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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