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22 point 3N


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I do not understand the rationale for playing at trick 2. It must be better to play on first. If West has 5 s and East 2, you want to drive out West's entry first.

A spade can probably be taken by either defender and East will be keen to win the first trick for the defense to return his remaining .

Also opponents may switch erroneously to if you lead , while they are very unlikely to switch to if you lead .

So drive out the ace, which might be with West. Low to the jack.

 

Rainer Herrmann

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going up

 

West will win and play another club (East showing out).

 

I assume you'd drive out the A now, East would win and return a spade.

 

Hold on a second... can we discuss the auction please?

 

I opened a 15-17 NT, partner stayman'ed hoping to invite if I had hearts and when I bid 2S, he's kinda forced into 2N now. I decide to accept with my minimum hence this slightly thin 3N :P This was a new partner, hadn't discussed invite philosophy lol.

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If you play on diamonds first, East wins the second round (West showing doubleton if giving honest count) and returns a club.

I will unblock a honor from hand on the second , win the return in hand and play a to the jack.

If East wins and returns a third , I am forced to finesse the 8 next.

 

Rainer Herrmann

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Apparently East will duck the first diamond. That might be the opportunity to play on spades. My line of play would be more like:

 

Win the first one in hand, cheaply.

Small to the J winning.

Small spade towards the Q in hand.

 

If West wins and plays another club when East wins in he won't have a club to return (unless they're 4-3).

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Hold on a second... can we discuss the auction please?

I feel the same way. Responder has the worst possible 7HCP I could imagine, and Opener has a minimum. IMO responder should have passed 1NT and opener had no business accepting an invitation. The bidding seems odd to me.

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We should probably make on this layout, assuming we eschew the strange play of a spade at trick two (or three).

 

After we've knocked out the diamond, won the club in hand, and played a spade to the jack, what will East do? He won't fancy a heart, so he'll play back either a spade or a diamond. Now we'll have the reasonable line of a spade to the queen, cashing the minors, and then playing spades from the top. That works when 9 is trebleton, of East has K + 9 or AKx.

 

I know that in theory East could switch to a heart from the king, or not switch to a heart with something like A9xx Jxxx Axx xx. In practice, however, people don't do that sort of thing.

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Well if I had played it...

 

Win 10 in hand.

J wins.

low spade... I think East should go up with the A and lead back a club, though even if he ducks it doesn't matter because then West wins with K and with no other entries the hand becomes easy.

 

I count:

2 spades

1 heart

3 diamonds

3 clubs

 

If East doesn't win the A and if the 9 doesn't fall you have to play West for the J and finesse the 10 as if West has the K he will go up with it and cash his clubs anyway and you're down so no sense leading low to the Q.

 

Edit: Though you will need to unblock the KQ in order to ensure communication to the dummy in the event you have to fall back on the heart trick.

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