The 3♦ is lead to the K♦ and your Ace. (Not a very good overcall, huh?) Whenever you cash the first spade, you'll find out West has none. Plan the play (matchpoints).
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Interesting play problem
#1
Posted 2024-November-28, 12:47
The 3♦ is lead to the K♦ and your Ace. (Not a very good overcall, huh?) Whenever you cash the first spade, you'll find out West has none. Plan the play (matchpoints).
#2
Posted 2024-November-28, 12:53
why didn't I pass the X?
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH
#4
Posted 2024-November-28, 13:47
Given the actual lie of the cards, 4N can be made but 4H can't.
If you rebid 2N, you're frequently going to be playing in 3N when you should be in 4H - partner rates to be 5=2=3=3 quite often.
If you rebid 2N, you're frequently going to be playing in 3N when you should be in 4H - partner rates to be 5=2=3=3 quite often.
#5
Posted 2024-November-28, 13:48
Well, here we are.
I think I need to set up my heart tricks while maintaining entries and control..
Off the top of my head I’ll play a heart , spade, rough a spade then low heart, hoping for 3-3 split
I could give it more thought later
I think I need to set up my heart tricks while maintaining entries and control..
Off the top of my head I’ll play a heart , spade, rough a spade then low heart, hoping for 3-3 split
I could give it more thought later
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH
#6
Posted 2024-November-28, 14:21
jillybean, on 2024-November-28, 13:48, said:
rough a spade
Methinks you're still wondering why we didn't pass the double I've forgotten what contract I'm in playing with a robot enough times because I was focused on what the auction should have been, I understand!
Will probably start with a low diamond back to the 9, and if it holds a low club, but I don't really know what my plan is.
#8
Posted 2024-November-28, 15:57
My first thought is that W cannot be as bad as I am, so if his diamonds were not kosher his hearts mean business.
So I cover ♦K with A and then play hearts to K.
I then lay down spades A and K (pitching a heart), does W follow?
So I cover ♦K with A and then play hearts to K.
I then lay down spades A and K (pitching a heart), does W follow?
#9
Posted 2024-November-28, 16:27
akwoo, on 2024-November-28, 13:47, said:
Given the actual lie of the cards, 4N can be made but 4H can't.
If you rebid 2N, you're frequently going to be playing in 3N when you should be in 4H - partner rates to be 5=2=3=3 quite often.
If you rebid 2N, you're frequently going to be playing in 3N when you should be in 4H - partner rates to be 5=2=3=3 quite often.
Nonsense. The odds that he has 3 diamonds are vanishingly low after the overcall
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
#10
Posted 2024-November-28, 23:04
mikeh, on 2024-November-28, 16:27, said:
Nonsense. The odds that he has 3 diamonds are vanishingly low after the overcall
Keep in mind this is at a club where the standards of play are incomprehensibly low to you. Let's just say that, if I showed you all 4 hands and the results at both tables (in a 2.5 table game) for that problem I have in the Beginners forum, you'd be scratching your head.
For the purposes of this problem, I can say that West did not have a 2♦ overcall (East had a second diamond(!) but that's irrelevant to this problem) but did have a double of 4♥.
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