Teams. IMPs converted to VPs. Lead J♣.
How would you play? This is based on a suit combination on bridgewinners, but this time the opponents know that South is off a key card.
If you lead a heart towards dummy, West plays the ten.
Posted 2016-December-05, 09:17
Posted 2016-December-05, 10:55
Posted 2016-December-05, 15:27
alok c, on 2016-December-05, 10:55, said:
Tramticket, on 2016-December-05, 12:14, said:
Posted 2016-December-05, 16:00
Posted 2016-December-06, 05:50
Posted 2016-December-06, 10:53
Posted 2016-December-09, 10:02
Teams. IMPs converted to VPs. Lead J♣.
How would you play? This is based on a suit combination on bridgewinners, but this time the opponents know that South is off a key card.
If you lead a heart towards dummy, West plays the ten."
From first principles:
If LHO knows that South's ♥s are 9 high, then it seems that ♥T is a compulsory false-card.
If LHO has ♥void or ♥T singleton, then you are doomed (at single-dummy).
If LHO has ♥HT doubleton, then you can't go wrong (2 cases).
A. If you rise with ♥A, you succeed when LHO has ♥HT6 or ♥T6 (3 more cases. So A succeeds in 5 cases).
B. If you finesse ♥J, then you succeed immediately when LHO has ♥KQT6 or ♥KQT (2 cases).
When ♥J loses to an honour, and, on the next round, you rise with the ♥A, then you succeed when LHO has ♥T6 (another case, so B succeeds in 5 cases).
C. When ♥J loses to an honour, and, on the next round, you finesse ♥9, then you succeed when LHO has ♥HT6 (another 2 cases. So C succeeds in 6 cases).
Hence, IMO, plan C is best.
KQT6 (B C) KQT (B C) KT6 (A C) QT6 (A C) KT (A B C) QT (A B C) T6 (A B) T (None).