Trumpace Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 You decide to play bridge just before going to work in the morning. You join a table as East with the hand: _, A9875, A2, AK7653 You look at the bidding box which reads (North was dealer) P- 1H - P - 1S - P - 2C - 2D - P - 2NT - 3C - P - 3H - X - P - P - P. South has lead the ♦Q. Apparently, the previous east left after seeing the dummy. This is what you see: [hv=w=sqj98653h43dk85c9&e=sha9875da2cak7653]266|100|Lead: ♦Q.[/hv] Plan the play. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scoob Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 gotta love joining tables mid-play. i don't have a lot of hope of making this, but for what it's worth this is what i'll attempt: take and exit in ♥, repeat until they breaksetup clubs how many tricks i actually get depends on how ♣/♥ suits break. if 3-3 in each i could make 10 tricks, but realistically i'm expecting 4-2 in both which means i'm screwed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
whereagles Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 You can try ruff 3 times in hand. That will work if clubs break 33, regardless of hearts. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scoob Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 see, didn't even occur to me to rough ♣ as extra transport into dummy for that approach. :moron: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trumpace Posted July 20, 2005 Author Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 You can try ruff 3 times in hand. That will work if clubs break 33, regardless of hearts. What 3 cards would you ruff in hand? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
coyot Posted July 20, 2005 Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 diamond and 2 spades. If clubs are 3-3, you're safe on crossruff. Take d in hand, cross in d to table, ruff spade. Club ace club ruff, ruff spade, club ruff, ruff spade. You will make AK♦, A♣, A♥ and 5 ruffs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trumpace Posted July 20, 2005 Author Report Share Posted July 20, 2005 diamond and 2 spades. If clubs are 3-3, you're safe on crossruff. Take d in hand, cross in d to table, ruff spade. Club ace club ruff, ruff spade, club ruff, ruff spade. You will make AK♦, A♣, A♥ and 5 ruffs. Eh? That's confusing. You say a diamond and 2 spades, but your next sentence ruffs 3 spades... What did you actually mean? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
coyot Posted July 21, 2005 Report Share Posted July 21, 2005 diamond and 2 spades. If clubs are 3-3, you're safe on crossruff. Take d in hand, cross in d to table, ruff spade. Club ace club ruff, ruff spade, club ruff, ruff spade. You will make AK♦, A♣, A♥ and 5 ruffs. Eh? That's confusing. You say a diamond and 2 spades, but your next sentence ruffs 3 spades... What did you actually mean? Oh, sorry :lol:. It does not really matter what you ruff from the table. - 3rd spade is perhaps a little less safe than a diamond, though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Trumpace Posted July 21, 2005 Author Report Share Posted July 21, 2005 Oh, sorry :rolleyes:. It does not really matter what you ruff from the table. - 3rd spade is perhaps a little less safe than a diamond, though. It actually does matter. You have exactly 3 entries to dummy (2 club ruffs and ♦K). You need those entries to ruff with _small_ trumps in hand. On the table the play went: ♦A, ♣A, club ruff, spade ruff, club ruff, spade ruff. ♥A. (LHO dropped the Q). ♦ to King. Now I was at the crossroads, ruff a diamond or ruff a spade... I thought what you say, that diamond would be safer than a third spade (as there were 4 diamonds outstanding compared to 2 spades) and tried to ruff a diamond, but RHO jumped in with the King of trumps! The contract was down one now. I had clues from the bidding (which I happily ignored!): LHO bid 2D, RHO didn't raise diamonds but bid 2NT... It was likely diamonds were 6-2. If that was the case, the third ruff has to be a spade. Incidentally RHO played high-low on diamonds, which I ignored too! RHO held a 3-5-2-3 hand and was doubling with 5 trumps to KJT. As Sherlock Holmes would put it, "I took a mouse and rode it like an elephant". Just because there are 2 spades and 4 diamonds outstanding, does not make the diamond ruff safer! We should learn to look at as many clues possible. When LHO dropped the Q on the ♥A, it was likely that the he had 6 diamonds (bidding inference), 3 clubs (fact), 1 heart (bidding+play inference) and 3 spades! This means we must ruff the third spade and not a diamond. In the words of Terence Reese, "Each hand is a jigsaw puzzle and each piece must fit". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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