Opening lead is the ♦4 playing attitude leads (I.e., the 4 is not necessarily the 4th best spot). (It is A/X Sectional Swiss teams, (IMPs w/ 7 board match on a 20 VP scale) if it matters, and the opponents are a local expert team).
It's a guess but how much of a guess is it?
#1
Posted 2014-June-30, 01:32
Opening lead is the ♦4 playing attitude leads (I.e., the 4 is not necessarily the 4th best spot). (It is A/X Sectional Swiss teams, (IMPs w/ 7 board match on a 20 VP scale) if it matters, and the opponents are a local expert team).
#3
Posted 2014-June-30, 03:38
But any difference in odds is very small, so you might just as well flip a coin for your choice.
Haarlem, The Netherlands
#4
Posted 2014-June-30, 05:11
#5
Posted 2014-June-30, 05:32
#6
Posted 2014-June-30, 06:09
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#7
Posted 2014-July-03, 16:09
After the hand, I thought that maybe the J is right, not because it is more likely to be right (I think it is pretty much 50/50 on the nose), but because if you have AQ both onside you'll learn more about the distribution of the hand and points from winning the J than from winning the K. But I wasn't sure if that wasn't the resulting of that hand making me find reasons I should have played the J.
#8
Posted 2014-July-03, 16:32
I do like "unblock the King". If you did that, would it fool your opponents?
Seems like the auction, and your partnership holdings, pretty much guarantees the ♦ lead. Unless spades are 3-3 does it even matter?
Next board.
#9
Posted 2014-July-05, 08:07
when "You have two suits of equal length and one is headed by the ace." The auction strongly suggests a minor lead, and the discrepancy between suit lengths makes it unlikely that opening leader is 5-5, so this only affects overtricks when for the leader to be 4-4 in the minors, although it may affect the contract when the leader is 3-3.
#10
Posted 2014-July-05, 10:28
taking only a cursory glance at the problem. Rho will win the trick
(if not the hand is over) and what they do next might easily depend
on what card you play from the dummy and your hand.
If you play the King and rho wins the ace you have clearly given away
the position of the Q since otherwise your choice of play would be the
J to at the very least let rho think lho has the Q.
If you play the J and rho plays the Q and it holds rho does not know for
sure if their p holds the A (since you might duck to hold up anyway) and if
they have something that "looks better" they might switch.
You also need to carefully play the 8 because you want to hide the 32 in case
this might give the impression lho has led 2nd best from nothing in diamonds.
#12
Posted 2014-July-05, 11:52
If LHO has 5 diamonds, I think it is basically a complete guess, on this auction where opener and responder have both shown a 4-card major he will lead a 5-card diamond suit 100% of the time independent of his holding in the suit*.
If LHO has led a 4 card suit, I still think Q10xx (say) is more tempting than Axxx but this is marginal.
*unless he's got 5+ clubs as well, that is...
#13
Posted 2014-July-05, 12:40
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#14
Posted 2014-July-05, 12:43
#15
Posted 2014-July-05, 21:36
#16
Posted 2014-July-06, 03:03
It's basically a guess, but holding 5 ♦ between the 2 hands some opponent (or both [4-4]) has ♦ length. Like others I suspect LHO would be slightly more likely to lead from Qxxx than Axxx. If they are 5-3, then I don't think LHO would have an issue leading from either Axxxx or Qxxxx. But when they are 3-5, I suspect that LHO would have a lot more trouble leading from Axx than Qxx. So the J seems marginally better than the K to me.
#17
Posted 2014-July-06, 10:29
rmnka447, on 2014-July-06, 03:03, said:
It's basically a guess, but holding 5 ♦ between the 2 hands some opponent (or both [4-4]) has ♦ length. Like others I suspect LHO would be slightly more likely to lead from Qxxx than Axxx. If they are 5-3, then I don't think LHO would have an issue leading from either Axxxx or Qxxxx. But when they are 3-5, I suspect that LHO would have a lot more trouble leading from Axx than Qxx. So the J seems marginally better than the K to me.
Axx is such a horrible lead, I agree Qxx is much more likely.
If you are going to lead Axx in the search for partner's suit, in many cases the Ace is better because partner can read to duck the second round with Kxxxx. That rather depends on the auction making it clear that you are leading from A to three, however.
#18
Posted 2014-July-07, 12:04
c_corgi, on 2014-July-05, 12:43, said:
Bird/Anthias emphasize non-Stayman auctions in their NT book. In Stayman auctions when opener shows a major there is a fair sized minor preference, and in most cases the longer minor is superior(Most of the hands they cover for this auction have 2,3, or 4 little cards. In these cases shown, the longer minor always shows superior results.)
Also, if opener has 4 clubs, it is unlikely his partner was considering doubling Staymen for lead.
#19
Posted 2014-July-07, 15:50