AyunuS Posted August 13, 2013 Report Share Posted August 13, 2013 I was just in a tourney where my partner made a questionable spade raise and then I ended up in 4♠ with hands I wouldn't think should have bid it. Even worse, it gets doubled and then I notice my team didn't even really have a spade fit! But I made it somehow! Can you figure out how? Opening lead is Q♥ and you win it with A. I also fear that there will be too many solutions that rely on north having the big clubs, so to eliminate that and make it easier to figure this out, I will tell you that south has both the A and Q of clubs. I'll post the solution later.http://img812.imageshack.us/img812/52/2c46.png Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CamHenry Posted August 13, 2013 Report Share Posted August 13, 2013 My instinct would be to win and immediately give up a ♣. A sleepy S might pounce on it, then find himself unable to lead a trump without giving up a trick there. I win the return, then play to cross-ruff as much as I can (throwing a ♦ on the ♥K). Takes good breaks nearly everywhere, but should be feasible on the right layout. (At the table I'd probably lead up to the ♣K, just in case the A was onside) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AyunuS Posted August 13, 2013 Author Report Share Posted August 13, 2013 My instinct would be to win and immediately give up a ♣. A sleepy S might pounce on it, then find himself unable to lead a trump without giving up a trick there. I win the return, then play to cross-ruff as much as I can (throwing a ♦ on the ♥K). Takes good breaks nearly everywhere, but should be feasible on the right layout. (At the table I'd probably lead up to the ♣K, just in case the A was onside)That is pretty much correct. Although there's one more thing you have to get past. Where do the K and Q of spades need to be and how do you play so that you get around them good enough to take with the J? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
iviehoff Posted August 13, 2013 Report Share Posted August 13, 2013 I was just in a tourney where my partner made a questionable spade raise and then I ended up in 4♠ with hands I wouldn't think should have bid it. Even worse, it gets doubled and then I notice my team didn't even really have a spade fit! But I made it somehow! Can you figure out how? Opening lead is Q♥ and you win it with A. I also fear that there will be too many solutions that rely on north having the big clubs, so to eliminate that and make it easier to figure this out, I will tell you that south has both the A and Q of clubs. I'll post the solution later.You are a robot? It is E's spade raise that I would call questionable. Probably your best chance of making a lot of tricks is to lead the CK at trick 2 and then see how far you get with a cross-ruff. I expect in real life I'd take the DA first and lead towards the CK, as the CA with N is an additional chance, given everything else that can go wrong, and it probably doesn't concede a vital tempo; you are going to need both high diamonds to stand up anyway.To actually make it, that will be the 5 top cards + 5 ruffs, ie 2 club ruffs, 2 heart ruffs and a trump promotion on the third round of diamonds - which probably needs S to hold a singleton trump honour which fell under the A - probably when he get off lead with a trump when in with a club. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AyunuS Posted August 13, 2013 Author Report Share Posted August 13, 2013 Well when I play with a robot, I do try to bid like one so that they're more likely to bid correctly. 3♠ was only 10-12 total points and since it gives a little for a singleton, that's how many points I have. What I thought was questionable was the 2♠ when it only had 3 spades in its hand. Anyway, iviehoff, that sounds like it might work, but that's not how I did it. The spades are actually a perfect 3-3 split between them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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