Jump to content

A surprisingly elusive Par - plan your play


Recommended Posts

MP

[hv=pc=n&w=shkqj952d863caqj9&e=saq974ht8dkqt52c6&d=n&v=n&b=5&a=p1sp2hp3dp3hp4hppp]300|240[/hv]

 

So (one way or another) as West you ended up in 4.

You receive the lead of 4.

How do you plan to proceed?

 

[EDIT] If you play a high diamond now, South covers with the Ace and returns 3.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I’ll hold off until others have replied but there’s a minor point that every good player gets right almost without conscious thought….and it’s at trick one. It is?
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I’ll hold off until others have replied but there’s a minor point that every good player gets right almost without conscious thought….and it’s at trick one. It is?

 

I'd be inclined to think the lead is a singleton and I am going to lose the first two tricks. Happened once in a teams game when LHO led a diamond after I had shown five in the auction and dummy came down with three, which motivated me to take a very deep finesse later in the play (I was right about the layout).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oops, forgot to come back to this.

 

I guess I would win, ruff a club, throw a club on the ace, ruff spade, ruff club, ruff spade, and draw trumps.

 

But I admit I'm a little baffled since I was sure North's diamond was a singleton, and if so South should be able to get us down 1 by giving North a ruff at trick 2, contradicting the title of 4 being par.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Oops, forgot to come back to this.

 

I guess I would win, ruff a club, throw a club on the ace, ruff spade, ruff club, ruff spade, and draw trumps.

 

But I admit I'm a little baffled since I was sure North's diamond was a singleton, and if so South should be able to get us down 1 by giving North a ruff at trick 2, contradicting the title of 4 being par.

A of diamonds, diamond ruff sets up the diamonds. Now if hearts are 2=2, after north scores his ruff, and he has the heart ace, you’re cold. You’re also cold if north was 2=1 in the reds, regardless of who has the heart ace.

 

As for the best line of play, I don’t think it’s clear, although knowing the auction might help. It’s even possible that north has Jxx or Jxxx in diamonds…..in the latter case, it’s south who wants the ruff. North had to lead something and if west has shown clubs, he’s not leading that suit…a diamond might be tempting.

 

I do think it to be a bit odd, if south started with AJxx, for him to switch to a club rather than the ‘obvious’ trump….whether it’s truly ‘obvious’ may depend on the auction of course, if the diamond ace was stiff, a club will probably seem at least as ‘obvious’ as a trump.

 

I’d like to know the calibre of my opps before committing to a line.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

contradicting the title of 4 being par.

The Par was 4+1, but I thought that might be a spoiler... sorry if you found that misleading.

 

I guess I would win, ruff a club, throw a club on the ace, ruff spade, ruff club, ruff spade, and draw trumps.

Looks fine to me and maybe some already got this wrong... but if N with A ducks trumps twice then you still have to get the spades/diamonds discard right and make the right decision when he plays 9.

It's late (hope I made no confusion), full hand tomorrow.

 

I’d like to know the calibre of my opps before committing to a line.

Nothing like the level you are imagining or used to, welcome to a club :)

Nor is the layout extreme, N had J94 and A63.

The table I saw led 4 and returned 3, unfortunately I didn't see how it developed.

But most were in 4 making, plus a couple of 3NT that made by luck and a 5 that made by error.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...