Jump to content

Play 4H 2-27-11


Phil

Recommended Posts

Had a bout with insomnia last night. This was a deal I played on Jack:

 

[hv=pc=n&s=sa972h98732da62c6&n=sthaj5dkqjt5cqj42&d=e&v=0&b=8&a=pp1sdp3hp4hppp]266|200[/hv]

 

The opening lead is the K.

 

A continuation if you like:

 

 

Assuming you win the A, you play a club and it continues 9, Q, K. The J is returned.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It seems to me that you can always make the contract provided trumps break and you loose only 2 trump tricks.

But since you can not draw trumps this will require that West holds either both trump honors, which is not unlikely given the bidding, or if West has specifically KT or QT

The play is tricky if East holds only a doubleton in .

 

If West holds: KQ8xx,KQ,xxx,Axx you must avoid that East gets a ruff with a low trump.

 

T1:ace

T2: to the king

T3:jack ruffed

T4: ruff

T5: to dummy

T6: ruff. If the ace drops:

T7: to dummy

T8:queen, discarding the ace.

 

continue if West does not ruff. If East ruffs low, over-ruff.

 

If the ace does not drop, continue .

 

Rainer Herrmann

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rainer, you seem to be going down when West has KQxxxx KQx x Axx, when you could have made by leading trumps at trick three. I think a 6-2 spade break is quite likely when East returns J.

 

You are right. On a probability basis it is better to play West for KQx and the plays are not compatible.

I just mentioned the play because it is artistic.

 

Rainer Herrmann

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK you lead a club up and RHO wins the K and plays the J. Now what?

 

Duck spade, ruff next spade, ruff club, play trumps for 1 loser (KT/QT with LHO). It's necessary to duck a spade before ruffing, otherwise RHO forces dummy with a 3rd spade when in with his first heart.

 

I thought of this for like 15 secs. How bad did I do? B-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually I think there's no need to hope that West has got H10 or KQ(x) in Hearts, in case spades are 6-2.

As an example, let's suppose West has : KQxxxx Kx xx Axx to East : Jx QTx xxx KTxxx which looks compatible with the bidding/play.

If we play [1]Ace, [2] to J/King, [3]Ruff the J, [4]Ruff club, [5] to Jack and Queen, what can East do ?

Nothing.

We just loose 1 and 2.

Still I'm still not sure how to play this throughout.

I'll try to finish my own analysis and post something later if I find it interesting.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here's my analysis.

1. We suppose that East doesn't have 7+ HCP or 6HCP+spade-fit (pass over DBL). Hence combinations like Qx by West become unlikely. Anyway this has a small impact.

 

2. The EW combinations that remain where we may succeed seem to consist of :

KQxxx(x) KQ x(x+) A(x+)

KQxxx(x) KQx x(x+) A(x+)

KQxxxx Kx xx Axx

KQxxxx KT x Axxx (unlikely).

 

3. If we start with [1]Ace, [2] to King, [3]J ruffed, [4]ruffed, [5] up, it seems that we preserve our chances in almost all cases (Rainer's cute case where West has KQxxx KQ xxx Axx is one of the exceptions !)

 

4. At this stage, defense comes into play : if West plays a small , we must play the J. If East takes that, we have to hope West was 6223. If the Jack scores, the rest should be fairly easy. The problem is when West plays an honor (we take the Ace). After this...

 

5. We have a true problem : we can always proceed with [6] ruff, and we suppose the Ace falls (there are variants if it doesn't fall, and we can still make -- can't we ? Yes). NOW this is decision time :

- if West had KQxxxx KQ xx Axx, we just have to play on Diamonds and abandon trumps ;

- if West had KQxxx KQx xx Axx, we must play trumps before diamonds (9 is a nice card).

Now I don't really see how to decide (frequencies favor the latter, play of the J favor the former ?). The same kind of guess may arise in less likely distributions of the minor (variants).

 

Difficult to conclude.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dellache, I enjoy reading your posts and I think you analyzed this nicely.

 

If anyone wants to check out the actual hand and try it, its in Session 4 of the Cap Gemini pairs on Jack. As a matter of fact, I'm mildly surprised that because this hand was played at such a high profile tournament, that it wasn't written up. Or maybe it was.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

- if West had KQxxx KQx xx Axx, we must play trumps before diamonds (9 is a nice card).

I don't think this hand is at all likely - Jxx 10x xxx Kxxxx is a routine raise after 1 (dbl). Hence I think you should play for spades 6-2.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...