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[hv=d=s&v=e&n=s6ht864dkqt82ca87&w=sj43hak75da5ckqt4&e=sakt87hj3d4cj9652&s=sq952hq92dj9763c3]399|300|Scoring: IMP[/hv]

 

West North East South

 

 -     -     -     Pass

 1NT   Pass  2    Pass

 2    Pass  3    Pass

 3NT   Pass  Pass  Pass

 

 

P leads K diamonds I play 6

 

can some one tell me the correct play here please

 

TY

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Are you saying it held and asking what partner should return? Or what you should have played at trick 1? or how declarer should play. I'll assume it was one of the first 2.

 

1) the correct count card is the 8 of diamonds back. If you feel like being trickier or just don't care the 2 is fine too. Won't matter.

 

2) the 6 of diamonds is not the right play. Playing standard you can play the 7 (the 9 can cost if pard has KQT8 and you get screwed up and block the suit or something like that) if ud play low. Play the clearest card without giving up a trick.

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you gave your partner a nasty problem. You may have had 976 of diamonds, 96, 76, or you may have had J63. A63 is sufficiently unlikely on the auction to probably rule out. So your partner shifted. I would have to analyze the hand more to see if this is the best shot to beat it, but you certainly gave partner a problem. Had you played the 7, partner would surely continue as 76 and 976 can be ruled out. You cannot unblock the jack in case pard has, say, KQT third. Or AKT third.
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The 6 cannot be the right card. When you signal high to encourage a continuation, you always signal with the highest card you can afford, so that it is easier for partner to read it. Clearly the 7 and the 6 are the same in trick taking value, so if you can afford the 6 you can certainly afford the 7. In fact the 6 should deny holding the 7, if encouraging, high card denies the one immediately above it.

 

Now, can you afford the J? No, since partner may hold some KQTx, you need the J as an entry for the rest of the suit. Can you afford the 9? This is tougher to decide quickly, in most cases it's probably doesn't matter, there is only the off chance partner has KQT exactly and declarer has A8xx, it makes overtaking the T safe. That or AKT if you lead K from both holdings.

 

The 7 should be able to get the job done for partner since the only holdings consistent with the play where you don't have the J or A are singleton 7 and doubleton 79.

 

BTW, in the bidding West is insane to bid 3nt, with a double fit for partner and fast values in the other suits, which screams for suit play. 3nt is almost certainly not the right contract and he will miss many good slams bidding this way. The time to bid 3nt is with a misfit for partner and the other suits well stopped, KQTx and the like, not Ax.

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One thing to add here. If your partner claims that you should have unblocked the jack, she is also saying that you have a specific agreement, i.e. that you must unblock an honour (A, Q or J) when a king is led against a NT contract.

 

Did you have that agreement? If yes, you failed to unblock the jack. If no, you must encourage as clearly as possible. Playing standard signals that would be the 7 with your holding, because the 9 could cost a trick as others have pointed out.

 

6 or 7, doesn't matter to you, but it matters to partner in certain instances. But then again, it matters little if she thinks you have denied the jack when you didn't unblock it. She was afraid of continuing diamonds into declarer's AJ tenace, also known as the Bath Coup.

 

Since you are from England, Wayne, you would know where Bath is located. Right, in the county of Somerset.

 

Roland

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With KQT of Ds, partner should lead the Q asking for an unblock of the J.

This is where Combine leads resolve ambiguity - lead the middle from 3 touching honours.

Not sure what is normal for you, Hog, but if you play Garozzo, A and Q are the cards that ask for attitude, K for unblock or count. Either is fine with me, you just need an agreement.

 

In this case sceptic's partner seemed to have an agreement with herself, and that's not quite enough.

 

Roland

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With KQT of Ds, partner should lead the Q asking for an unblock of the J.

This is where Combine leads resolve ambiguity - lead the middle from 3 touching honours.

Not sure what is normal for you, Hog, but if you play Garozzo, A and Q are the cards that ask for attitude, K for unblock or count. Either is fine with me, you just need an agreement.

 

In this case sceptic's partner seemed to have an agreement with herself, and that's not quite enough.

 

Roland

Agree with what you say.

 

Normal for us are combine leads -

top from 2 touching honours,

the middle from 3 eg KQT we lead the Q

top from 3 or 4 small

low from xx

3rds and 5ths

 

I know this is not "normal' for most.

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Actually, the county Bath is in is open to debate. According to the EBU, Bath Bridge Club is a member of the Avon Contract Bridge Association. However, Avon isn't really considered to be a county any longer, since when Bristol decided it wanted to be Bristol rather than part of Avon, there wasn't much left.

 

Mark (who lives in Bristol)

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Within England, leading the King against NT to ask for unblock is pretty much standard (so much so that I don't recall playing anyone who didn't play that way). If you can't unblock, traditionally you give count (to enable partner to pick up declarer's doubleton queen or jack).

 

So if I were playing with a pick-up English partner, I would have played the Jack at trick 1. You still have the 9, so the suit is unlikely to be blocked (if partner has KQ10 exactly it will be blocked. But you can't get it right if partner has KQ10 AND if partner has KQ10x).

 

If I were playing with an American partner, where Ace or Queen for unblock is more common, I would encourage. The general rule when encouraging is the play the highest non-honour card you can afford. Well, the highest card you can afford is the NINE. You have J9xxx - the suit can't be blocked while you keep the Jack, whatever partner's holding.

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