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match point strategy


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here's an example from rubens' great book, the secrets of winning bridge .... i'll post the hand, i look forward to the conversation...

 

Q6543

AK

AK

6432

 

AT987

543

542

AK

 

you are south, vulnerable, and are in 6... the lead is the J... as you can see, the contract is cold... however, this is matchpoints... there are 19 other tables, 9 other n/s pairs

 

how do you play the hand, and why do you select that particular line? have fun :)

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Guest Jlall
I wouldn't safety play unless the field was so weak that I thought I had a very near top score by just getting to 6S. I would almost always play a spade to the ace.
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After winning the lead in dummy I'll lead a spade towards hand. If RHO follows small, I will take the safety play of putting in the 9.

 

There are only two particularly interesting positions: stiff king on my left and KJx on my right. And other situation and this play is unlikely to matter. These two positions are very close to equally likely. Playing the 9, I stand to win a full matchpoint from each table in slam that plays the ace when I am right, and will lose a full matchpoint to each table in slam that plays the ace when I am wrong. Playing the A, I stand to win a full matchpoint from each table in slam that plays the nine when I am right, and will lose a full matchpoint to EVERY table, in slam or no, when I am wrong.

 

Seems to me that if even one table in the room fails to bid the slam, my expectation will be best by taking the safety play.

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A priori, KJx on right will occur 11%, K singleton on left 13%.

 

If I play the ace, then I gain one MP (half a US MP) from the other pairs in slam if I am right.

 

If I guess to play the ten, then I gain one MP from the other pairs in 6 and *two* MP (one US MP) from the other pairs in 4.

 

This analysis suggests that the breakeven point is when one-twelfth of the other tables don't bid slam, which in most fields is enough evidence to take the safety play IMO.

 

[snip a load of stuff based on 6NT making :) ]

 

BTW Luke, is the field 10 tables or 20? Not that it should make any difference to our decision :unsure:

Edited by MickyB
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Play it safe, i.e. spade to the Ten.

 

I can speak only for myself, but at least I

do not play in a fields, were every table

will reach 6S every time.

 

Even in top level events, it may happen

that they miss 6S.

And at least some of the people who did reach

6S will play it safe.

 

If you really believe, that every table is in

6S, then play low to the ace, losing only in

case RHO holds KJx.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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I'm sure there exist fields (World Pairs final?) where everybody will be in 6S, but I haven't found one yet. I would take the safety play.
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Just bang down the A. Still pick up KJx on left and stiff Kings.

 

I'm 2:1 favorite over those that take the safety play for more tricks. Hearts might be 7-1 as well, which skews it a little more for the A.

 

Adam's play is probably better though.

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excellent discussion, very interesting, the reasoning used here by some very good players... this is what rubens has to say about it, and probably shows why i'm not an expert

 

first of all, he tries to decide what the normal contract would be, then what the alternative contracts might be... with this hand, even tho slam happens to be cold, he reasons that it isn't a particularly easy slam to reach... micky is right that the odds are roughly even (13:11), which means it's only correct to play for the overtrick if more than twice as many pairs bid 6s as stop in game (or bid 6nt or 7nt or 7s)... rubens thinks that is highly unlikely, and he's probably right that at *least* as many will be in 4s as in any slam

 

all declarers in 7nt are down, so making 6s beats them automatically (assuming the safety play)... those in 7s have to play the ace of spades, playing for a stiff king, since it's the only way to lose no spade trick... it either makes or it doesn't... so if the K is stiff, you lose to the 7s bidders and to all 6s bidders who bang the ace...

 

the 6nt bidders have only one chance for a good score, and that is to lead the Q (hoping for a stiff jack with west)... on any other distribution, they're gonna lose to some 7s bidders and all 6s bidders ... so hope for the stiff jack if you're in 6nt

 

this all boils down to rubens belief that if you take the safety play you will win much more often than you lose... he bases it on his belief that in very few (he says in probably none) tournaments will anything approaching twice as many people be in 6s as in 4s... so lead low from dummy to the 10 and take your cold slam (of course, if east shows out it's still cold... just go up with the ace and lead back)

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