Sink this Slam
#21
Posted 2018-April-12, 19:35
#22
Posted 2018-April-12, 20:02
As can be seen, only a diamond lead breaks up the pointed suit squeeze, so well done, Jeffrey.
At my table, events were more exciting. West led the jack of spades, forgetting that he was not playing Rusinow leads with this particular partner, and attempting to break up one of the squeezes rhm was trying to break up. I had the table presence of a gnat, and eschewed the squeeze and took the spade finesse in the ending! I thought it unlikely that an Irishman would false-card on opening lead against a grand ...
#24
Posted 2018-April-13, 00:03
♠xxx ♥Ax ♦AQTxxxx ♣x
was possible, but not
♠xx ♥T9x ♦AQxxxx ♣AK?
Ok.
#25
Posted 2018-April-13, 00:39
nullve, on 2018-April-13, 00:03, said:
♠xxx ♥Ax ♦AQTxxxx ♣x
was possible, but not
♠xx ♥T9x ♦AQxxxx ♣AK?
Ok.
Neither me.
Bidding 3♥ with 7 diamonds and 2 hearts when partner shows a strong hand with 5 hearts and maybe 4 spades is a bid I would not expect from an expert, stone age Acol notwithstanding.
This is particularly so when playing strong jump shifts.
Put this hand to a bidding panel when the bidding is at 2♠ and check how many votes you will get for 3♥ with the North hand.
I expect an almost unanimous vote for 3♦.
North promises 3 hearts and there is no way of shutting out diamonds when he has them.
The bidding is absurd for this construction
An acceptable sequence
1♦--1♥ (personally I would jump shift)
2♦--2♠
3♦--3♥
4♥--4NT
5♥-- 5NT
6♥--?
Rainer Herrmann
#26
Posted 2018-April-13, 01:31
Another reason for leading a diamond from this holding is that declarer may have to choose between a simple finesse and a ruffing finesse, and it is harder for declarer if he has to make that decision at trick 1.
#27
Posted 2018-April-13, 01:43
jallerton, on 2018-April-13, 01:31, said:
Another reason for leading a diamond from this holding is that declarer may have to choose between a simple finesse and a ruffing finesse, and it is harder for declarer if he has to make that decision at trick 1.
Generally true, particularly if the contract would be 6♥.
But put yourself in the shoes of declarer in an expert game.
You are in 7♥ and someone leads against this bidding a diamond.
I would ask myself, would an expert do this holding nothing in diamonds against 7♥?
I think this would be very odd.
It does rather indicate that the finesse is working.
Rainer Herrmann
#28
Posted 2018-April-13, 01:45
nullve, on 2018-April-13, 00:03, said:
♠xxx ♥Ax ♦AQTxxxx ♣x
was possible, but not
♠xx ♥T9x ♦AQxxxx ♣AK?
Ok.
The main problem with your constructions is that it makes declarer's bidding rather ludicrous. On the actual hand, declarer could count 11 tricks, and his only losers are the 3rd and 4th round of spades. Your constructions give declarer 10 top tricks, and he has a second round loser in both cases. He would just ask for kings over 5H.
#29
Posted 2018-April-13, 01:48
lamford, on 2018-April-12, 20:02, said:
Did he really forget, or did he make a normal falsecard on lead against a slam?
#30
Posted 2018-April-13, 03:06
cherdano, on 2018-April-12, 04:08, said:
cherdano, on 2018-April-13, 01:45, said:
And the actual bidding is not ludicrous?
Sorry, but you seem to have your own ideas what "ludicrous" is and what not.
Rainer Herrmann
#31
Posted 2018-April-13, 04:26
I asked my son who is a better player than me to look at this hand and all the replies on the forum, and he said it is like 'Working out 17 moves in chess in your head in advance'. I asked him what he meant by that. He replied "Analysing the auction, constructing the possible hands, the play of the 13 tricks, working out any squeeze possibilities and then making the lead." "Nothing is set in concrete" as it is on a chess board" he added, "where you can see all the pieces."
I understand exactly what he means now. There is a guessing element involved too.
#32
Posted 2018-April-13, 05:53
jallerton, on 2018-April-13, 01:31, said:
Another reason for leading a diamond from this holding is that declarer may have to choose between a simple finesse and a ruffing finesse, and it is harder for declarer if he has to make that decision at trick 1.
Yes, I thought North was much more likely to be ♠xx ♥Axx ♦AQTxxx ♣xx when grand is huge (96% DD according to Bridge Analyser) and my partner agrees that 3D was a better bid on his actual hand. We do need to define more accurately when we raise with three-card support. My view is that we should do so with 1-3-5-4 but not with 2-3-6-2 and good diamonds for example. Good point in the last sentence.
#33
Posted 2018-April-13, 06:00
cherdano, on 2018-April-13, 01:48, said:
The Irish had five players. They were quite aware that only four of them played in any match, but West forgot which of the 5C2 combinations were playing which leads ... or so the Irish Blarney went.
#34
Posted 2018-April-13, 15:15
#35
Posted 2018-April-13, 18:55
manudude03, on 2018-April-13, 15:15, said:
Who leads from QJx against a grand in a suit which might lie KTx in dummy opposite A9x in South?
Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth - Conan Doyle.