Defence plays top club top club, carding looks like a doubleton on your right. How will you play?
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And now its a play problem http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/topic/55119-the-five-levelagain/
#1
Posted 2012-August-21, 12:53
SO this is the hand from http://www.bridgebas...ive-levelagain/ back again as a play problem.
Defence plays top club top club, carding looks like a doubleton on your right. How will you play?
Defence plays top club top club, carding looks like a doubleton on your right. How will you play?
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper
#2
Posted 2012-August-21, 15:23
♠KJ, ♥AQ, and then:
- If LHO is 2=2 in the majors, duck a diamond, hoping his diamond is the king.
- If LHO is 2=1 in the majors, finesse the hearts then play diamonds from the top, hoping he has two honours doubleton.
Alternatively, I might try to catch him napping with ♦Kx, by playing a diamond to the ace early
- If LHO is 2=2 in the majors, duck a diamond, hoping his diamond is the king.
- If LHO is 2=1 in the majors, finesse the hearts then play diamonds from the top, hoping he has two honours doubleton.
Alternatively, I might try to catch him napping with ♦Kx, by playing a diamond to the ace early
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
#3
Posted 2012-August-21, 16:30
gnasher, on 2012-August-21, 15:23, said:
♠KJ, ♥AQ, and then:
- If LHO is 2=2 in the majors, duck a diamond, hoping his diamond is the king.
- If LHO is 2=1 in the majors, finesse the hearts then play diamonds from the top, hoping he has two honours doubleton.
Alternatively, I might try to catch him napping with ♦Kx, by playing a diamond to the ace early
- If LHO is 2=2 in the majors, duck a diamond, hoping his diamond is the king.
- If LHO is 2=1 in the majors, finesse the hearts then play diamonds from the top, hoping he has two honours doubleton.
Alternatively, I might try to catch him napping with ♦Kx, by playing a diamond to the ace early
Can't he just return a club and have RHO overruff? It seems like we have to play LHO for Qx of spades along with a favorable diamond layout.
#4
Posted 2012-August-22, 04:32
gnasher, on 2012-August-21, 15:23, said:
♠KJ, ♥AQ, and then:
- If LHO is 2=2 in the majors, duck a diamond, hoping his diamond is the king.
- If LHO is 2=1 in the majors, finesse the hearts then play diamonds from the top, hoping he has two honours doubleton.
Alternatively, I might try to catch him napping with ♦Kx, by playing a diamond to the ace early
- If LHO is 2=2 in the majors, duck a diamond, hoping his diamond is the king.
- If LHO is 2=1 in the majors, finesse the hearts then play diamonds from the top, hoping he has two honours doubleton.
Alternatively, I might try to catch him napping with ♦Kx, by playing a diamond to the ace early
quiddity, on 2012-August-21, 16:30, said:
Can't he just return a club and have RHO overruff? It seems like we have to play LHO for Qx of spades along with a favorable diamond layout.
SO this was a hand from brighton given to me in the pub, this is a trap that many people fell into apparently. TO win you should cross in hearts and draw trumps by leading the J, and preserving the K to ruff the club return high.
Lho has 2218 with stiff K, so it was possible to win.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper
#5
Posted 2012-August-22, 06:55
phil_20686, on 2012-August-22, 04:32, said:
TO win you should cross in hearts and draw trumps by leading the J, and preserving the K to ruff the club return high.
If RHO covers the jack, you willl have to guess whether to play for the suit to be xx-Q9x or 9x-Qxx . Playing ♠AK works when it's Qx-9xx or Q9-xxx, which is one extra combination.
A priori that makes it better to play ♠AK, but leading the jack may still be right, because RHO may not cover with Qxx, and LHO might not have preempted with a hand like Qx x KJ AKJxxxxx.
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
#6
Posted 2012-August-22, 07:33
gnasher, on 2012-August-22, 06:55, said:
If RHO covers the jack, you willl have to guess whether to play for the suit to be xx-Q9x or 9x-Qxx . Playing ♠AK works when it's Qx-9xx or Q9-xxx, which is one extra combination.
A priori that makes it better to play ♠AK, but leading the jack may still be right, because RHO may not cover with Qxx, and LHO might not have preempted with a hand like Qx x KJ AKJxxxxx.
A priori that makes it better to play ♠AK, but leading the jack may still be right, because RHO may not cover with Qxx, and LHO might not have preempted with a hand like Qx x KJ AKJxxxxx.
Yes, seems impossible to me for lho to have Qx spade and the stiff K of diamonds.
Still, thought it was interesting.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper
#7
Posted 2012-August-22, 17:25
phil_20686, on 2012-August-22, 04:32, said:
Lho has 2218 with stiff K, so it was possible to win.
Even on the KD lead, which they led against me. You win, cash two trumps, finessing against East, and two or three hearts (keeping an entry in North) and exit with a club. Now you throw a diamond on the second high club and you are home. Similarly on two top clubs, you draw two rounds of trumps only, finessing, cash two or three hearts and duck a diamond. A bit of a miracle lie.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar
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