lead problem
#22
Posted 2011-June-10, 10:23
rduran1216, on 2011-June-10, 10:10, said:
Devastating. I hope it's not a language/logic thing but, devastatiing to declarer or the defense?
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#23
Posted 2011-June-10, 15:26
Hanoi5, on 2011-June-10, 10:23, said:
declarer has
Q109xx
AQxx
J
Axx
www.longbeachbridge.com
#25
Posted 2011-June-10, 17:49
Just saw that its a passed hand so im leading clubs.
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#26
Posted 2011-June-10, 19:54
D-out for trump promote or wait for S-K wins.
#27
Posted 2011-June-11, 00:41
hatchett, on 2011-June-10, 16:43, said:
Declarer wins the club lead in hand and plays a diamond. If you duck, he wins the king and plays a spade, then crossruffs. If you take the ace of diamonds and play a club or a heart, he wins, cashes ♦K, draws trumps, and concedes a diamond.
On a trump lead, you can afford to duck the diamond, then win the spade continuation and play a second trump. That holds declarer to six trumps and three side winners.
#28
Posted 2011-June-11, 03:34
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 00:41, said:
Declarer wins the club lead in hand and plays a diamond. If you duck, he wins the king and plays a spade, then crossruffs. If you take the ace of diamonds and play a club or a heart, he wins, cashes ♦K, draws trumps, and concedes a diamond.
On a trump lead, you can afford to duck the diamond, then win the spade continuation and play a second trump. That holds declarer to six trumps and three side winners.
Oh yes didn't notice the strong ♦ pips in dummy, but now you can make 10 tricks on both a ♥ and a ♣ lead. If you get a trump lead, simply run the ♦ J
#29
Posted 2011-June-11, 03:34
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 00:41, said:
Declarer wins the club lead in hand and plays a diamond. If you duck, he wins the king and plays a spade, then crossruffs. If you take the ace of diamonds and play a club or a heart, he wins, cashes ♦K, draws trumps, and concedes a diamond.
On a trump lead, you can afford to duck the diamond, then win the spade continuation and play a second trump. That holds declarer to six trumps and three side winners.
Oh yes didn't notice the strong ♦ pips in dummy, but now you can make 10 tricks on both a ♥ and a ♣ lead. If you get a trump lead, simply run the ♦ J
#30
Posted 2011-June-11, 03:34
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 00:41, said:
Declarer wins the club lead in hand and plays a diamond. If you duck, he wins the king and plays a spade, then crossruffs. If you take the ace of diamonds and play a club or a heart, he wins, cashes ♦K, draws trumps, and concedes a diamond.
On a trump lead, you can afford to duck the diamond, then win the spade continuation and play a second trump. That holds declarer to six trumps and three side winners.
Oh yes didn't notice the strong ♦ pips in dummy, but now you can make 10 tricks on both a ♥ and a ♣ lead. If you get a trump lead, simply run the ♦ J
#31
Posted 2011-June-11, 03:44
hatchett, on 2011-June-11, 03:34, said:
I don't see how that helps. As soon as the defence win a spade trick, they'll play another trump. Doesn't that hold declarer to six trumps, two clubs and one diamond?
#33
Posted 2011-June-11, 03:53
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 00:41, said:
Declarer wins the club lead in hand and plays a diamond. If you duck, he wins the king and plays a spade, then crossruffs. If you take the ace of diamonds and play a club or a heart, he wins, cashes ♦K, draws trumps, and concedes a diamond.
On a trump lead, you can afford to duck the diamond, then win the spade continuation and play a second trump. That holds declarer to six trumps and three side winners.
Andy....with all due respect, what happens with the defense you suggest, if declarer has the ♠ A and pd ♣ A ?
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#34
Posted 2011-June-11, 04:28
hatchett, on 2011-June-11, 03:51, said:
I'm not sure exactly what sequence of plays you have in mind, but after ♦J, spade, trump, ♦K to the ace, we play ♠K, spade. If he plays another diamond immediately, East ruffs; if he draws the trump first we can cash another spade.
It's true, I think, that declarer can make by playing ♦J, ♣K, ♦K, but I'm not sure why he would play this way.
#35
Posted 2011-June-11, 04:48
MrAce said:
Partner has had a chance to give suit preference in trumps at trick one, so we might have some idea.
But anyway, if declarer has AQxxx AQxx J xxx and we duck, it's not clear that he's going to make. He might put the king up and take a spade finesse, or even if he runs ♦J he might now play a club.
(Sorry about the nonsense I posted in an earlier version of this post - too early in the morning.)
#36
Posted 2011-June-11, 05:38
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 04:28, said:
It's true, I think, that declarer can make by playing ♦J, ♣K, ♦K, but I'm not sure why he would play this way.
I play your first line, when east ruffs the ♦, he can't play a ♠ without setting up a trick, so win the ♣ in hand, ruff a ♠ and concede a ♦ to west who has no more ♠.
#37
Posted 2011-June-11, 05:54
I agree that works, but it's also not a very credible line.
#38
Posted 2011-June-11, 06:06
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 05:54, said:
I agree that works, but it's also not a very credible line.
You can discard a ♣ when the ♦ is ruffed, this is better I think, if East started with three ♠s . I'm not sure why
it's not credible a line you need to set up two additional tricks in either ♠s or ♦s and running the ♦J is not an unreasonable way to start the suit.
#39
Posted 2011-June-11, 06:48
hatchett, on 2011-June-11, 06:06, said:
Maybe we're talking about two different lines? I think you've already lost a spade and ♦A, and you've already thrown your club loser on the second round of diamonds.
Actually, in the position I think you're in (after trump lead, ♦J, spade, trump, ♦K to A, ♠K, spade ruff, diamond) there's another, simpler way for declarer to make: just overruff and set the spades up by ruffing, with ♣A as an entry for casing the long one. This is an unusual variation on the "reserve trumps" theme: declarer draws East's trump by leading a loser through him.
#40
Posted 2011-June-11, 07:21
gnasher, on 2011-June-11, 06:48, said:
Actually, in the position I think you're in (after trump lead, ♦J, spade, trump, ♦K to A, ♠K, spade ruff, diamond) there's another, simpler way for declarer to make: just overruff and set the spades up by ruffing, with ♣A as an entry for casing the long one. This is an unusual variation on the "reserve trumps" theme: declarer draws East's trump by leading a loser through him.
There are lots of ways you can make, throwing a ♣ when the ♦ is ruffed, leads to a double squeeze, .