ahydra Posted April 22, 2018 Report Share Posted April 22, 2018 [hv=pc=n&s=s8ht4daqjt4cat742&n=sak42haj9dk93ck53&d=s&v=n&b=5&a=1dp1s3h4cp4dp4s(cue)p4np5s(2%20with%20Q)p5nt(king ask)p6c(no kings)p6dppp]266|200[/hv] IMPs, you're vul. The auction from South's 4C bid onwards might not be to everyone's liking but it's not that important here. Easy problem: how does South justify his bold bidding on the ♦2 lead? Harder (or at least more fun) problem: suppose instead North bids 6NT instead of 6D and you get the ♦7 lead from East. Diamonds break 2 in West, 3 in East ahydra Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gszes Posted April 22, 2018 Report Share Posted April 22, 2018 given the bidding it seems HUGELY unlikely rho can have 4 clubs so lets see if we can cater to lho having 4 clubstrick 1 win the dia 9trick 2 club k (assuming it holds)trick 3 low club toward the ace (if clubs break 32 hand is over if rho had 4 clubs (ouch) hand is over the other way. we have 2 scenarios 1. rho ruffs the club we pull a 2nd round of trump asap and it makes no difference if rho shows out on 2nd round or not cash the club A ruff a club with trump K come back to hand and claim (there may be technical things like cashing the spade AK to pitch a heart etc.2. rho ducks the clubtrick 4 win the acetrick 5 lead a 3rd clubat this point we still have Kx of trumps in dummy to ruff our 4th club and proceed as noted above. 6n?am I really going to lead a heart at trick 2 hoping lho has a singleton honor AND lho has 4+ clubs AND 6+ spades rather then rely on clubs breaking 32?? sigh only if this is set up as a play problem where taking the most likely path to success fails. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phil Posted April 22, 2018 Report Share Posted April 22, 2018 In 6♦ it looks normal to win a diamond in dummy and play ♣K, ♣. If RHO ruffs, he ruffs air. I suppose I should be careful and cash a high spade first before giving up a club- if East were 2=7=3=1, he can beat me by pitching two spades on the clubs and getting a spade ruff. 6N is sort of interesting, and I am not sure the fancy line of ♠AK, cash a 3rd diamond and one club, endplay East with a heart, take the forced heart return and sque eze West in the blacks is much better than just conceding a club. I cannot see a way to combine my chances. For instance, if I play ♣AK (getting the bad news, I need to cash my spades to strip East's exit cards and I have killed my communication. Obviously I cannot duck a club either. Similarly, if I run diamonds, not touching clubs, I can comfortably pitch one spade from my hand but my hand gets squeezed on the 5th diamond and West is in no pain. I can pitch a club, but that gives up chances for 3-2 clubs. Assuming West is always bidding with seven spades, and East might have six for the w/r preempt: Squeeze line wins with East is 2=7=3=1. It fails when East has 2=6=3=2. Nothing works when East is 3=6=3=1 or 3=7=3=0. If East looks very conservative, I'd try the squeeze, but otherwise I'd go for the simple line. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ahydra Posted April 24, 2018 Author Report Share Posted April 24, 2018 Full hand was: [hv=pc=n&s=s8ht4daqjt4cat742&w=sqt9653hqd52cj986&n=sak42haj9dk93ck53&e=sj7hk876532d876cq]399|300[/hv] So in 6D you play as Phil described - win ♦K, ♠AK, ♣Kx, if East discards you win Ace and play another ♣x, then later ruff a club high to set them up. In 6NT you need the squeeze, which you may find if you cash the CK and note the fall of East's Q. FWIW I was East and I am not particularly conservative w/r ;) Unfortunately neither our team nor the opps had any need for such heroics as they were both in 5D. ahydra Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gszes Posted April 26, 2018 Report Share Posted April 26, 2018 We have a winner - low heart at trick 2 hoping for lho to have stiff heart honor 6+ spades and 4+ clubs NOW let me see a show of hands=== how many will try for this rather than relying on a 32 club split? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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