spadebaby, on 2014-May-04, 11:27, said:
Learned how to do this todat!!!
Thanks for telling me to do it....
Was a lot easier than trying to type in.
Let's forget the bidding. Your opponents bidding was horrible. Your question was about play.
Normally you would try to draw a picture of your opponents hands from their bidding. Here I would fail miserably figuring out what they hold from their bidding It also helps if you provide us with at least the opening lead. We can assume north didn't lead a trump and probably not a heart. So let's assume a low spade. That would be surprising only in that north needs the
♠KQ
♦A,
♥KQ and probably some more points for his very strong auction. Be that as it may, the first thing you do Is count your certain winners and losers. Things look very grim You have a certain heart, spade, and two certain diamond losers. You have possible club loser and a likely second diamond loser.
Bridge is a funny game. You might get an ok result going down four, if the opponents could make their 4
♠ contract. They would make 4
♠ if your side can win no more than one club and not get a diamond trick. From the auction, that is at least possible (Thank goodness they didn't double). You went down two, I would probably go down three!!!
I would win the spade Ace and cash a top club, and then play South to hold
♣Qxx originally, so I would cross to the
♥A and run the
♣9. That would lose to the queen, I have a club to get back to dummy, so I will eventually win two major aces, the
♦K and five clubs for down three. The sad news, we get two clubs, and two major suit aces against 4
♠.
Note, you may have heard the old saying "eight ever, nine never" which refers to the question of rather or not you finesse for the trump queen when missing just the Queen from amongst the honors, as on this hand. If you have "eight trumps" the idea is to take the finesse, if you have nine trumps, the idea is to play for the drop. Here, from the bidding and from analysis of the contract (compared to their 4
♠), I choose to ignore that bridge rhyme. As you learn more you might make similar decisions.
Another GREAT way to learn how to play the cards is to play on line. No that will not make you instantly better, but after you play, you can go to myhands and review the boards you played. I suggest you look for contracts where you played the same denomination (suit/notrump) as the majority of the field and look to see which hands you took less tricks than the vast majority of other people. Then look at the hands to see what they did compared to what you did. Try to figure out why their line of play was different from yours. A better way, of course, is to go a bar with friends who played the same hands (this could be from face-to-face or online) and talk about how the hands were played (and bid).