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Hold-up in 3NT


ahydra

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Problem for N/B, others use spoilers please. I thought this was an instructive deal from the Australian GNT that's currently going on.

 

You may have heard of the "rule of 7", which states that:

- when you have a suit like Axx vs xx(x) in NT

- and you need to lose the lead to establish enough tricks for the contract

 

you subtract your total number of cards from 7 and hold up that many times. So with Axx opposite xx you hold up twice (7 - 5 = 2), the idea being to exhaust an opponent of that suit when they split 4-3. When you lose the lead, hopefully the player with 3 wins, and they can't reach their partner's hand to cash the fourth one. With Axx opposite xxx, you duck once, which exhausts an opponent when the cards split 5-2.

 

So, here's the hand of interest:

 

[hv=pc=n&s=sa5ha83d4ckqt9873&n=s7643h42daqjtcj52&d=s&v=0&b=11&a=1cp1dp2cp3cp3nppp]266|200[/hv]

 

West leads the 10 against your aggressively-bid 3NT and East plays the J. How many times do you hold up?

 

ahydra

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What signals are my opps playing and what card does E play ? Pairs or teams (not sure what GNT is) ?

 

IMPs (GNT = Grand National Teams I believe, any Aussies please correct me if I'm wrong). East played the J as mentioned in the OP. I'm not sure what the signals in use at the table were, but most likely reverse attitude.

 

Since I'm here, I'll post the answer in a spoiler:

 

 

As NickRW mentions, there are exceptions to the rule (indeed to every rule in bridge!), and the main one is: don't hold up if a switch might cause you problems, for example if the defence can then cash a wide-open suit.

 

Here the danger is a switch to spades. It's not wide open, but you do have only one spade stop and are missing the KQJ10. So you must take the A immediately and not hold up at all - otherwise a spade switch establishes three tricks for the defence, to go with the opening heart trick and the A. Yes, you then need hearts to be 4-4 (or blocked, e.g. KQJ tight with East) - but that's better than zero chance at all on a spade switch :). Thankfully this time you're in luck as hearts are indeed 4-4 (West 109xx, East KQJx).

 

At the table the declarer, a renowned author and international player, erroneously held up twice. The defence missed the first opportunity to switch to spades, but took the second, and declarer went two down.

 

 

 

ahydra

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At the table the declarer, a renowned author and international player, erroneously held up twice. The defence missed the first opportunity to switch to spades, but took the second, and declarer went two down.

 

 

 

 

This is shocking!!

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I don't think declarer's play was crazy. RHO made a great falsecard playing the J at trick one - there is no four-card holding where this is the normal play. If RHO did that intentionally - well done. What did RHO play to trick two?

 

You'd feel a right lemon if you had the entry and partner actually had 109xxx, partner almost certainly has 4+ hearts so is no lose.

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There's a bridge proverb here: Never give the defenders a second bite of the cherry. I am somewhat astounded that a renowned author and international player held up twice. There are additional clues (even without the play of the J which could be a true card, a false card or a brilliant discard). At this vulnerability why hasn't East or West overcalled with a major suit at the one level, or even weak jump overcalled at the two level? There's 19 HCPs outstanding, plenty of major suit intermediates and possible unbalanced distribution unaccounted for. That, in itself, provides possible evidence that the defenders' major suits are split 4-4 in s and 4-3 in s. That evidence is not conclusive as there are many possible distributions where the suit quality of a 5 card major does not warrant overcalling at the one level. But a declarer should be looking at everything, not just what happens at trick one.
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You'd feel a right lemon if you had the entry and partner actually had 109xxx, partner almost certainly has 4+ hearts so is no lose.

 

I agree with you because it is no loss to overtake, partner is not leading from Tx here. However, I would expect partner to lead low from T9xxx.

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You'd feel a right lemon if you had the entry and partner actually had 109xxx, partner almost certainly has 4+ hearts so is no lose.

I should have made my point more precisely. If all I tell you is that partner led the T against 3NT, you have KQJx, and there are two small in dummy, then you would probably play low - partner is too likely to have made a passive lead from T9x or T98.

 

Here in this hand you know declarer doesn't have four hearts, and hence it is right to play the J. But I made my comment without having read that RHO actually had KQJx. I thought it would be a great play on this hand to overtake with the J from QJxx, and play the Q on the second round.

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I agree with you because it is no loss to overtake, partner is not leading from Tx here. However, I would expect partner to lead low from T9xxx.

 

We'd certainly lead the 10, we don't tend to lead low from 10 high holdings, often treating 10xxx as xxxx and leading second, and leading the 10 from 109...

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At this vulnerability why hasn't East or West overcalled with a major suit at the one level, or even weak jump overcalled at the two level? There's 19 HCPs outstanding, plenty of major suit intermediates and possible unbalanced distribution unaccounted for. That, in itself, provides possible evidence that the defenders' major suits are split 4-4 in s and 4-3 in s.

 

I'll confess that I simplified the hand to make it more suitable for an N/B puzzle. In the actual auction there was some competition from EW. Here's the actual hand (board 20, closed room, rotated).

 

ahydra

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I'll confess that I simplified the hand to make it more suitable for an N/B puzzle. In the actual auction there was some competition from EW. Here's the actual hand (board 20, closed room, rotated).

 

ahydra

 

Whilst I appreciate the +1 for my analysis - thank you - I don't think Mr. Klinger would appreciate that you have changed the bidding and the cards played to set a problem for Novices and Beginners. Mr. Klinger's books have been a fountain of knowledge for me at the bridge table. What you have done is akin to the chess-playing scene in one of the James Bond films that my husband commented on years ago that he noted had invalidated the position.

 

With the actual hand that you have provided I am not surprised that Mr Klinger held up twice, hoping that the opponents wouldn't find the switch. With the bidding and the cards played it becomes a different hand.

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I would have thought 4-4 hearts are very likely on the actual bidding, making the hold-up a poor option.

 

And I'm sure Klinger changes hands for instructional purposes all the time. He can hardly complain if someone else does it as well.

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I would have thought 4-4 hearts are very likely on the actual bidding, making the hold-up a poor option.

 

And I'm sure Klinger changes hands for instructional purposes all the time. He can hardly complain if someone else does it as well.

 

I agree with what you are saying, and the defenders have the added advantage of knowing that South doesn't have a 4 card heart suit (because he didn't bid s) on the posted hand so East can always play the J from a holding such as KQJx confident that he is not giving away a trick. On the actual hand South's double of the artificial 1 = 1 bid doesn't necessarily mean he has 4s. North has chosen to bid 2 with not a great collection of cards, and it is fairly reasonable to assume that he has a 5 card suit for his call.

 

Yes, experts do make mistakes, and authors such as Mr. Klinger undoubtedly change hands for instructional purposes, but to say as the forum poster did that he messed up the play of the hand by holding up twice is a little unfair. He took a view with a different auction and different cards being played that the suit was 5-3, not 4-4. Yes, it was wrong view given the defenders can also attack s, but he put them to a guess whether to carry on playing s to knock out his stopper, or to find a switch after collecting two tricks.

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