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Bob Hamman's pretty good


Jlall

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[hv=n=st642h72dat9cq952&s=sakq73haq6dq2cj43]133|200|[/hv]

 

You open 1S, X on your left, 2H (constr raise) by pard, 2N by you, 3S from pard, 3N by you, 4S from pard, all pass.

 

Lefty leads the trump 8. You draw trumps in 3 rounds unblocking the ten, LHO pitching 2 diamonds (encouraging). You play a club to the 9, RHO wins the king, and plays back the HJ.

 

How do you play? Imps.

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A and both remaining trumps to arrive to:

 

---

(7)

AT(9)

Q52

 

 

---

Q6

Q2

J4

 

Expecting LHO to have had:

 

x

Kxxx

KJxx

ATxx

 

Edit: I changed the red cards in dummy. By the way what would change if LHO plays T on the first round of the suit?

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It looks easy easy to go wrong assuming West just had 1453, by just playing a Club now.

 

As West is marked with the remaining Ace-Kings, it costs nothing to go up with the Ace and play the 2 remaining trumps. West will (or may) have to cope with 3 suits, and we should be able to read the position now, and find the right endplay always leading to 10 tricks (edit: of course dummy keeps -- x AT Qxx).

 

It allows us to win in case West had x Kxxx KJxx ATxx... and "forgot" to insert the T at trick 4 :) . Poor him.

Edited by dellache
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A and both remaining trumps to arrive to:

 

---

---

AT9

Q52

 

 

---

Q6

Q2

J4

 

Expecting LHO to have had:

 

x

Kxxx

KJxx

ATxx

This is not good if LHO kept:

     ---

     ---

     AT9

     Q52

---

Kx

KJ

AT

     ---

     Q6

     Q2

     J4

When you play then LHO will play A and return a .

It is better to keep in dummy then:

     ---

     x

     AT

     Q52

You play and LHO takes Ace and returns , but he will be squeezed on 3th because you can throw him in if he did put K singleton.

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This is a really cool hand - you give up a trick by not ruffing a heart in dummy, but the squeeze gets that trick back and gains another trick on top of it.

 

Bob seems to be especially good at farsighted unblocks of the 10 of spades. Have a look at this hand he played against me way back in 2003 by clicking on one of these links:

 

Click for Java presentation

 

Click to download .lin file

 

Bob is indeed pretty good :)

 

Fred Gitelman

Bridge Base Inc.

www.bridgebase.com

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This is a really cool hand - you give up a trick by not ruffing a heart in dummy, but the squeeze gets that trick back and gains another trick on top of it.

 

Bob seems to be especially good at farsighted unblocks of the 10 of spades. Have a look at this hand he played against me way back in 2003 by clicking on one of these links:

 

Click for Java presentation

 

Click to download .lin file

 

Bob is indeed pretty good :)

Fred, thank you, this play "at the table" was really amazing. (and also thanx for allowing us to follow it with your very (as always) thoughtful comments. It feels almost "live").

 

Best regards.

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This is a really cool hand - you give up a trick by not ruffing a heart in dummy, but the squeeze gets that trick back and gains another trick on top of it.

 

Bob seems to be especially good at farsighted unblocks of the 10 of spades. Have a look at this hand he played against me way back in 2003 by clicking on one of these links:

 

Click for Java presentation

 

Click to download .lin file

 

Bob is indeed pretty good :)

 

Fred Gitelman

Bridge Base Inc.

www.bridgebase.com

Yeah... he did this yesterday at a sectional like it was no prob haha.

 

My analysis in the post mortem at the other table was that this hand could not be made even after a trump lead.

 

I did not see Bob's line, but did I luck into being correct? (LHO was 1354).

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This is a really cool hand - you give up a trick by not ruffing a heart in dummy, but the squeeze gets that trick back and gains another trick on top of it.

 

Bob seems to be especially good at farsighted unblocks of the 10 of spades. Have a look at this hand he played against me way back in 2003 by clicking on one of these links:

 

Click for Java presentation

 

Click to download .lin file

 

Bob is indeed pretty good :)

 

Fred Gitelman

Bridge Base Inc.

www.bridgebase.com

Yeah... he did this yesterday at a sectional like it was no prob haha.

 

My analysis in the post mortem at the other table was that this hand could not be made even after a trump lead.

 

I did not see Bob's line, but did I luck into being correct? (LHO was 1354).

It looks as if a Club back after the King definitely ruins the endplay when West is 1354. I find it impossible to find at the table.

 

Inserting the 10 at the first turn also works nicely because it destroys the entry position (it works whenever Clubs are 4-2, doesn't it ?). I wonder who would find this at the table (not me!). Maybe Mr. Hamman ?

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This is a really cool hand - you give up a trick by not ruffing a heart in dummy, but the squeeze gets that trick back and gains another trick on top of it.

 

Bob seems to be especially good at farsighted unblocks of the 10 of spades. Have a look at this hand he played against me way back in 2003 by clicking on one of these links:

 

Click for Java presentation

 

Click to download .lin file

 

Bob is indeed pretty good :)

 

Fred Gitelman

Bridge Base Inc.

www.bridgebase.com

Yeah... he did this yesterday at a sectional like it was no prob haha.

 

My analysis in the post mortem at the other table was that this hand could not be made even after a trump lead.

 

I did not see Bob's line, but did I luck into being correct? (LHO was 1354).

It looks as if a Club back after the King definitely ruins the endplay when West is 1354. I find it impossible to find at the table.

 

Inserting the 10 at the first turn also works nicely because it destroys the entry position (it works whenever Clubs are 4-2, doesn't it ?). I wonder who would find this at the table (not me!). Maybe Mr. Hamman ?

Yep, a club back was what I was thinking... I find that to be an amazing play! Beautiful hand all around, and well played by Bob.

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