Eight Tricks: Find the Ninth
#1
Posted 2018-December-31, 16:00
#5
Posted 2018-December-31, 21:33
johnu, on 2018-December-31, 19:42, said:
There are similarities, John, but that's where the similarity ends
Cyberyeti's on the right track. I purposely left out whether it is MPs or IMPs. It's easy peasy for 10 tricks if ♠ break 3-3, but that aren't going to happen Hint for solvers: the breaks are not favourable, but not extreme either.
#8
Posted 2019-January-01, 07:27
The_Badger, on 2019-January-01, 05:55, said:
My first thoughts if W plays ♠ 10 or J were to try to find E with QJx in one of the minors and try to duck a trick to him using the spade entries, I don't see a way of rectifying the count for a squeeze if I keep the spade entry, I may be able to duck a trick to QJ109, but I can't duck the second trick I need to, and it looks like there can be no triple squeeze as it seems E is 43(42) in that case so W controls the other minor.
Yes I can make double dummy if E has QJ109x2 in the minors and W has the spades, but I'm not going to.
#9
Posted 2019-January-01, 10:09
However, there is no a priori reason to believe that both the minors are splitting 4-2, and from the aggressive bidding it rather looks like at least one suit maybe 5-1. If I were playing this game, I probably see myself just playing AKQ of spades (if W interjects with a high spade card), hoping for the best
Whats the solution?
#11
Posted 2019-January-01, 15:38
#12
Posted 2019-January-01, 16:44
Anyway, it's a beautiful problem Thank you the_Badger.
#13
Posted 2019-January-01, 20:59
Ranmit, on 2019-January-01, 10:09, said:
However, there is no a priori reason to believe that both the minors are splitting 4-2, and from the aggressive bidding it rather looks like at least one suit maybe 5-1. If I were playing this game, I probably see myself just playing AKQ of spades (if W interjects with a high spade card), hoping for the best
Whats the solution?
Well done Ranmit. Here's the whole hand. And as you say...
...*IF* I know this
When the hand was played, West played the ♠10 when declarer led towards dummy. Declarer cashed the ♠AK and was about to play a third round of ♠s when East made an ill-timed compliment at the table to West "You're my favourite partner" in a voice that carried as much gloat as it did tribute.
Declarer stopped in his tracks, didn't play the third round of ♠s, and then proceeded to endplay East as you said in your post.
Poetic justice I think it's called
#14
Posted 2019-January-02, 02:17
That said, given East doesn't have a whole lot of HCPs for his raise to 2H, the odds favour something like the hand shown where the doubleton will be a Qx or Jx to give it away - and the comment certainly helps!
I figured that given this came from a book the solution would be the suicide squeeze, which (style points aside) I reckon would work the vast majority of the time in a club or even lower-level tournaments.
ahydra
#15
Posted 2019-January-02, 04:09
ahydra, on 2019-January-02, 02:17, said:
Ahydra is right that you won't find Ranmit's unlikely ♠-endplay, at the table, without a peek, or hand-record, or a road-map from a kind defender.
However, you also need a kind defender to co-operate in a fratricidal-squeeze
The more orthodox line has good legitimate chances. The minor-suit squeeze, 2 short of the count, is quite unusual and pretty
#16
Posted 2019-January-02, 08:43
#17
Posted 2019-January-02, 08:56
#18
Posted 2019-January-02, 09:32
Tramticket, on 2019-January-02, 08:43, said:
Read Rodwell's book! "Danger hand high" is one of its most memorable chapters...
My guess: