Posted 2020-October-27, 15:30
This is a good example of the need to take one’s time as declarer before playing to the first trick.
It seems natural to duck, because we’re missing the 10, but have all the other important spades.
If we do, then we’re in our hand, lacking ready communication for the dummy reversal. Of course, if spades are 4-0, we are down, on the dummy reversal line, since they tap dummy with a second club when we exit the club at trick 3. We have to revert to ruffing two clubs in dummy and hoping for clubs to split evenly or 3 rounds of hearts to survive (which would have been a lot more likely had we not ruffed one)
Thus the dummy reversal requires a non 4-0 trump break or an unlikely lie in one of the round suits.
Can we do better?
If trump are 4-0, the 9 will win the first trick. We now know not to try the dummy reversal, and instead need some luck, and card reading. We exit a club. West presumably wins and taps dummy. Cash the top hearts before East gets a chance to pitch if he is say 4=3=4=2. (Note that if west follows to the first spade low, we are in dummy and can use the double dummy approach safely)
Now diamond king, club ruff, diamond ace, and guess which red suit to ruff back to hand. We score 2 club ruffs, 3 top hearts, 2 top diamonds and 5 trump in hand.
But what if the spade 9 is covered by the 10? Now we know that the dummy reversal would have worked, but we can’t take that line, since we needed to be in dummy at trick 2.
Oh well, we’re still in very good shape.
We are cold if either black suit breaks and, if not, if we can score 3 hearts and 2 club ruffs. Note that we now have great spade spots, such that there is no risk of an overruff even if east has the 3 trump...his highest trump is the 6.
We exit a club. As it happens, west has a second trump. If he didn’t, his best play is a diamond.
Win the spade in hand, ruff a club with a high spade, cash the top hearts, and the diamond Ace, lead a red card, ruffing, ruff a club high, lead a red card, ruffing, and claim
If west returns a diamond, after our club exit, win in hand, ruff a club, cash the hearts and top diamond, ruff a diamond, ruff a club, ruff a heart, with the 8, pull trump and claim.
While if we had KQ10x in dummy, the dummy reversal line is best, assuming no 4-0 trump split, the low percentage of a 4-0 trump and the very high percentage chances that we can make if the 9 holds, makes me think that the 9 is the best play at trick 1. If west follows low, do the dummy reversal. Otherwise, play as above.
Would I do this analysis at the table?
Definitely, if I’m ‘on’. Does it take a long time to do? For me, yes. I know a couple of players whose bridge analysis is so fast that they’d figure this out in a minute or less. Me, I’d probabl6 take 5 minutes or more, but that’s one reason I prefer teams to mps. I can take as long as I want on important, tough hands, and catch up on the others.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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Win West's trump return with ♠J. Claim: Ruff a ♣ high. (Over) Ruff a ♥. Ruff a ♣ high. (Over) Ruff a ♥. Draw trumps. No need to risk an 8-0 ♦ break (You make 4 ruffs, 3 more ♠s, 3 ♥s, 2 ♦s).