West leads the queen of diamonds against your ambitious slam; plan the play. East will play the three, normal count, if you win the first trick in dummy.
Taking Guard A pretty line
#1
Posted 2021-April-16, 15:52
West leads the queen of diamonds against your ambitious slam; plan the play. East will play the three, normal count, if you win the first trick in dummy.
#2
Posted 2021-April-16, 19:13
trick 2 ruff a dia small
trick 3 small club toward the T
If lho wins trick 3
assuming they return a trump
trick 4 win in hand
trick 5 heart to A
trick 6 dia K pitch heart
trick 7 club finesse
trick 8 ruff club
trick 9 ruff a heart high*
pull trumps and claim
if rho wins the trick
assuming they return a trump
trick 4 win in hand
trick 5 club A
trick 6 ruff a club
trick 7 dia A pitch a heart
trick 8 heart A
trick 9 ruff a heart high*
pull trumps and claim
* if i suspect trumps are 4-1 I can ruff the heart low it merely makes a poor contract a tad worse
If this works I apologize to opps
#3
Posted 2021-April-16, 22:28
#4
Posted 2021-April-17, 04:24
smerriman, on 2021-April-16, 22:28, said:
Gszes did get trick two right, but then fell at the next hurdle.
#6
Posted 2021-April-17, 11:26
Playing on clubs works if LHO has Hxx. Best return by opps is a heart which scuttles the chances of a long diamond trick.
I lead a low club at trick 3 and play for LHO to have honor third and thus establishing by ruff the club J as trick 12
#7
Posted 2021-April-17, 13:54
Winstonm, on 2021-April-17, 11:26, said:
Playing on clubs works if LHO has Hxx. Best return by opps is a heart which scuttles the chances of a long diamond trick.
I lead a low club at trick 3 and play for LHO to have honor third and thus establishing by ruff the club J as trick 12
Even if a low heart to the 9 drove out the K or Q, and even if west held H10x(x), you cant get 12 tricks unless you find an unlikely squeeze layout....and even then an unlikely heart return by east kills any squeeze....its not that unlikely if west can be trusted to give honest, readable count.
#8
Posted 2021-April-17, 14:31
#10
Posted 2021-April-18, 12:35
mikeh, on 2021-April-17, 13:54, said:
Au contraire, Mike. On a fairly normal layout with both sides guarding hearts and clubs you have a compound guard squeeze. Declarer ruffed a diamond and cashed five more rounds of spades. There was no defence. Declarer just played a heart to the nine in the ending. West was 2-5-4-2 with the ten of hearts.
I looked up "unlikely" in my bridge dictionary and it said "one that cannot be foreseen by most experts". West had xx QTxxx QJTx Qx and could, maybe should, have broken it up by an initial heart lead.
#11
Posted 2021-April-18, 12:41
nige1, on 2021-April-17, 15:48, said:
A hopeless line, far below your normal high standard.
#12
Posted 2021-April-18, 15:23
lamford, on 2021-April-18, 12:35, said:
I looked up "unlikely" in my bridge dictionary and it said "one that cannot be foreseen by most experts". West had xx QTxxx QJTx Qx and could, maybe should, have broken it up by an initial heart lead.
I was responding to a comment suggesting a heart to the 9 at trick 3. If you can find a squeeze, of any kind, after that start, you see much deeper into the hand than I do.
Whether the winning line is the best, on a mathematical basis, is a question I cannot answer, but to claim that finding west with 5=4 reds and the heart 10 is common strikes me as requiring a pretty loose definition of common.
#13
Posted 2021-April-18, 15:59
lamford, on 2021-April-18, 12:41, said:
Not completely hopeless by any means, all these lines work if W has ♣Hxx or Hx and no trump higher than the 6 so 52 will do on the actual distribution (or E has ♣KQ stiff and no trump higher than the 6 or ♣KQx)
Not sure how this compares with the layouts the guard squeeze picks up
#14
Posted 2021-April-19, 04:15
Cyberyeti, on 2021-April-18, 15:59, said:
Not sure how this compares with the layouts the guard squeeze picks up
Agreed, but West could well have led a trump if he had Hxx in clubs and no spade pip. He expects North to be 2-4-5-2, typically. He should have led a heart on the actual hand.
#15
Posted 2021-April-19, 04:31
lamford, on 2021-April-19, 04:15, said:
He can't know for certain his spade pip is sufficient, N could have as much as Jx, knowing 7x is enough and 5x isn't is fantasy.
#16
Posted 2021-April-19, 06:07
Cyberyeti, on 2021-April-19, 04:31, said:
He can know there is a risk of a club ruff in dummy, so he should lead a trump whatever his pip when he has Hxx in clubs
#17
Posted 2021-April-19, 07:07
lamford, on 2021-April-19, 06:07, said:
That holds for pretty much any club holding he might have, trump lead looks good pretty much whatever his other holdings unless he has a load of clubs and suspects partner might overruff.
#18
Posted 2021-April-19, 08:12
Cyberyeti, on 2021-April-19, 07:07, said:
Interestingly, on the actual hand, where he had 9x QTxxx QJTx Qx a trump lead was fatal as he needs to start attacking the hearts straight away, although an improbable ♣Q also beat it in an unlikely way. Sometimes bridge is just too tough.
++++++++++++++++++++
Richard Pavlicek published many intriguing problems, where the best line is to run winners, hoping to read opponents' discards. Here however, when ♣ split 4-3, there seem to be promising straight-forward lines.
IMO, after winning ♦K, at trick 2, declarer should advance ♣T
If RHO has, say ♣Qxx it isn't always correct to cover. (For example, it saves declarer a guess with ♣KJx).
If LHO wins ♣T then you can finesse ♣J and ruff a ♣.
If RHO covers ♣T then you win ♣A, cash ♥A, ♦K and lead another ♣.
You have good chances when RHO has both ♣ honours.
If RHO was dealt ♣KQxx he will need nerves of steel to duck the second ♣. Although, if RHO does play low, then you should probably elect to duck, hoping to ruff out an original tripleton honour.
Edited for completeness.