So Now I'm a Conspiracy Theorist
#1
Posted 2014-August-24, 00:32
IMPS, ACBL robot individual
I think this is the highest percentage contract I have ever failed in. Those who are better at calculating these things will doubtless be able to come up with a more exact figure, but I think that winning the ♦ lead in dummy and playing a trump toward declarer's hand immediately (intending to finesse against the Queen) offers better than a 98.5% chance of success. My thinking is that this line makes if:
Diamonds are not 4-0 (meaning I can eventually ruff a club in dummy for trick 10) = 90.43%, or
Diamonds are 4-0 but onside with ♥s and ♦s not breaking viciously = ~4.3% (a bit less than 50% of remaining 9.57%), or
Either K or Q of ♦ is onside = ~3.3% (75% of remaining 5.27%), or
♥Q is doubleton, or ?.?%, or
Club/Heart Squeeze Operates ?.?%
On the actual lie of the cards, I believe it works to play a ♣ to the 10 immediately, precluding East from drawing trumps before a ♣ can be ruffed in dummy. But is that a higher percentage line?
#3
Posted 2014-August-24, 02:19
I wouldn't give much for the club-heart squeeze. In the ending you reached, you'd have to be very confident of your card-reading to play for East to have been squeezed.
At tick two, what about playing ♣A, club? That appears to guarantee the contract unless they ruff ♣A or arrange a red-suit ruff. East passed in 3rd seat at favourable, so is unlikley to hold ♥Qxxxxx.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2014-August-24, 02:26
#4
Posted 2014-August-24, 02:42
uva72uva72, on 2014-August-24, 00:32, said:
Since it's a robot tournament it's more about what the rest of the field are doing than about the success or failure of the contract, and by your off-centre opening you've ensured it's played the other way up than normal. I think playing it by South and getting a Gib-passive club lead and heart return would direct you towards ruffing a club in hand once you discover the trump break, rather than trying anything else.
London UK
#5
Posted 2014-August-24, 12:34
gordontd, on 2014-August-24, 02:42, said:
#6
Posted 2014-August-24, 15:56
A very challenging hand.
#8
Posted 2014-August-24, 18:12
uva72uva72, on 2014-August-24, 15:56, said:
#9
Posted 2014-August-25, 02:29
Bbradley62, on 2014-August-24, 18:12, said:
If you ruff the third club with ♠10, then take a losing spade finesse, they may play a fourth club, overruffed with ♠6. My line actually looks like a way to go down when everything is breaking, so I prefer the original poster's line.
#10
Posted 2014-August-25, 06:59
#11
Posted 2014-August-26, 03:17
#12
Posted 2014-August-26, 11:53
Dummy
♠AKQ10xx
♥void
♦ K10x
♣ A10xx
Declarer
♠8x
♥AKxx
♦AQ9xxx
♣K
The opening lead was a club. (If they lead any other suit it's cold.) But clubs was the unbid suit.
Partner ran this around to his K, as would anybody. Then he led a spade up. Club pitch on his left.
Then he called for the ♦K. Heart pitch on his right.
So he passed the ♦10 to the J and we scored up -50. This turned out to be an 80% score for us, as the field was playing spade slams doubled. Even 6♠X -1 lost to our score.