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Red save?


What's your call?  

33 members have voted

  1. 1. What's your call?

    • 7S
      9
    • Pass
      22
    • Double
      2


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Quite cool that you can construct the hands so confidently from the auction. South must have something like - HJxx Axx AKQJxx possibly moving one of the diamonds into another one of the suits. I feel like p must have some shortage to bid 4, so it is overwhelmingly likely that it will be in clubs.

 

So all we lose is: at most one trump trick, at most two diamond tricks and a club. On a lucky day the queen of diamonds is onside, or in partner's hand. Partner might even have a club void. We may not have a trump loser either. So to me that looks like -1100 on a bad day, -200 on a very good day (probably just a dream). I like those odds, and am willing to pay off to South not having their bid once in a while.

 

I would guess we normally go for 800. Can't really see how we go for more than 1100.

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Quite cool that you can construct the hands so confidently from the auction. South must have something like - HJxx Axx AKQJxx possibly moving one of the diamonds into another one of the suits. I feel like p must have some shortage to bid 4, so it is overwhelmingly likely that it will be in clubs.

 

The problem is if partner has 4 hearts and the spade ace then 7H is down if that's the dummy.

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Even without the spade ace if he just has Txxx of hearts then 7H is down if he leads a minor (as he should).

 

Edit: And of course it's always possible that partner has the Jxxx of hearts, I don't think anyone would criticize GSF with the same hand Kurt gave with no HJ.

 

edit again: sorry I miscounted the tricks, obviously if they have the spade ace they just have 13 tricks. I thought they needed 2 ruffs lol. So partner needs Txxx of hearts and the SA to beat it (or Jxxx of hearts).

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A rare case where the vul sac actually seems to make sense. It could work out poorly but I would be surprised if they are not making 7h well over 90% of the time (clubs breaking) and our max negative should be around 1100. We do indeed add some risk they may bid and make 7n but that is not a concern at IMPS. P may be hiding in the woods with a trump trick (they should not x for fear the opps will run to a making 7n) but unless it is a solid trump trick the opps will play p for the heart length if we bid 7s.
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[hv=pc=n&w=sqt9752hdkjt9ct83&d=s&v=e&b=3&a=1c1s2h4s5n(GSF)p7hpp]133|200|

IMPs. Your side is vulnerable against not. The auction has got high quickly. What now?[/hv]

IMO Pass = 10, 7 = 8. Double = 6. Josephine strikes back! :)

Possible drawbacks of sacrificing include:

  • You need confidence in opponents' bidding (e.g. 5N might have been intended as asking partner to pick a slam or make a graded response, perhaps distinguishing AK from KQ and AQ to length)
  • Partner might have slow trump trick ... or ... whatever.

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I think the estimates of how down we will go in 7 are about right at 1100, but that people are severely underestimating the chances that 7 is going down. We have a diamond holding and partner has a potential heart holding. I am not going to just guess and save them from their guess.
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If 5 NT is the GSF, then South needs to have a high honor. GSF asks for partner to bid 7 with 2 high honors unless you play some graded responses to it.

 

I have some problems sacrificing at 7 , so I'm a passer.

 

If the bidding is as "clear" at our table, then I'd expect our partners to be in 7 also. But surely our partners ought to at least be in 6, which risks an 11 Imp swing at most.

 

I'm not sure exactly what partner has bid 4 on. If partner has complimentary distribution, then the losses in 7 may be acceptable. But, in that case, shortness in a minor might portend enough length in to defeat 7 . If partner has bid 4 on shortness, -1100 might be on the low side of the set we'll incur.

 

I share nige1's concern that 5 NT might have been misconstrued. That would be less so if the opponents at our table are a well established partnership of very good players.

 

If 7 goes down, I'm risking a potential big swing our way if our teammates correctly ascertain not to bid 7 (14 IMPs). Or, changing a no swing into a big swing to the opponents ( -50 and -1100 for 15 IMPS).

 

I think in the post mortem, it's easier to explain not finding the sac that gives away 10 IMPs, then taking a phantom sac loses 14 or 15 IMPs.

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Even without the spade ace if he just has Txxx of hearts then 7H is down if he leads a minor (as he should).

 

Edit: And of course it's always possible that partner has the Jxxx of hearts, I don't think anyone would criticize GSF with the same hand Kurt gave with no HJ.

 

edit again: sorry I miscounted the tricks, obviously if they have the spade ace they just have 13 tricks. I thought they needed 2 ruffs lol. So partner needs Txxx of hearts and the SA to beat it (or Jxxx of hearts).

 

Declarer could also have a seventh club. Or have KJ of spades = a double dummy trump squeeze.

 

edited: obviously double trump squeeze fails as the KJ of spades would need to be in dummy.

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