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Play 6 hearts

#1 User is offline   CSGibson 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 01:25

club 7 is led


Beyond using 2 as an artificial game force, this was a completely natural auction. Comments on the auction?

How would you play this hand after the 7 is led in 6? This is matchpoints against an average open game club pair.
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#2 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 01:40

CA, HK, DA, D ruff, HJ. I am clearly missing something for this to be in A/E.
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#3 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 01:54

The ruff is irrelevant, because my low is going on the long , unless my finess fails, in which case I can ruff later. I break the Barry Crane rule and play West for Q, so I play A, A, J and let it ride if not covered.
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#4 User is offline   CSGibson 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 01:57

View PostZelandakh, on 2010-November-11, 01:40, said:

CA, HK, DA, D ruff, HJ. I am clearly missing something for this to be in A/E.


Mostly I wanted people's opinion on how to play the trump suit. If you read the lead as a singleton, that presents a vacant spaces argument to finesse LHO for the Q, but you can pick up Qxxx with RHO by playing naturally. There is no need to ruff a diamond either way, since you have time to establish the clubs for a diamond pitch if you guess the trump Q right.
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#5 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 05:23

I play low club at trick one, how do I do?
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#6 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 10:02

View PostFluffy, on 2010-November-11, 05:23, said:

I play low club at trick one, how do I do?


One down I guess
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#7 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 10:09

View PostCSGibson, on 2010-November-11, 01:57, said:

Mostly I wanted people's opinion on how to play the trump suit. If you read the lead as a singleton, that presents a vacant spaces argument to finesse LHO for the Q, but you can pick up Qxxx with RHO by playing naturally. There is no need to ruff a diamond either way, since you have time to establish the clubs for a diamond pitch if you guess the trump Q right.


I think you should give up on playing RHO for Qxxx. If LHO has a singleton this would give him two singletons.
However, a good opponent might have tricked you by playing the 7 from K7 or K7x.
But unless you know it is a very good player I would reject this assumption. Almost anybody will lead a singleton.

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#8 User is offline   CSGibson 

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Posted 2010-November-11, 10:58

View PostFluffy, on 2010-November-11, 05:23, said:

I play low club at trick one, how do I do?


Probably 2 down.
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#9 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2010-November-12, 09:44

give lho stiff and 4 hearts to the Q,9 (or Q,8)... how does this make by playing A, A, and then J? i must be missing something... it seems to me that if lho has the stiff i can only make if hearts are Qx/xxx or Qxx/xx or x/Qxxx (which i would dismiss as unlikely, as lho would then have two stiffs)... i'd play for Qxx/xx or Qx/xxx

i think i'd take the A, come to hand with the spade, run the J and then (if not covered) K, A... all lho has to do, with Q,9,x,x, is cover the J and i'm down one... iow, i'm playing for a 3/2 or 2/3 heart break with the Q being w/ lho
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#10 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 00:47

I play for West to have stiff clubs, if he made a genius lead i will pay him off.

Ace , Ace and Jack. East may have stiff Q, playing jack b4 A doesnt win for anything since we cant handle Q9xx Q8xx we always give a and a .

I play for 3-2 west holding Qxx or Qx or 4-1 Q stiff in west or east.

My line is similar to the ones above, but i also make when East OR west has stiff Q by cashing ACE first at no cost. I really didn't get this coming to hand with A and playing J. Playing J b4 ace is looking for trouble if one of the opponents have stiff Q.Am i missing something ?
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#11 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 03:14

View PostCSGibson, on 2010-November-11, 01:25, said:


club 7 is led
Beyond using 2 as an artificial game force, this was a completely natural auction. Comments on the auction?
How would you play this hand after the 7 is led in 6? This is matchpoints against an average open game club pair.

  • Bidding: 6 seems safer than 6 but not by much. Arguably, 6 is slightly preferrable at match-points. If you play that a jump to 2 over 1 shows 5+ and 4+ , then, later, you can make an informed choice of slam.
  • Play: I agree with rhm that LHO is unlikely to hold two singletons. But LHO might not lead a singleton, holding Qxx; Also LHO may have led 7 from a doubleton or tripleton, after all. So I go with CSGibson's A, K, finesse J. If RHO has Qxxx, then you can re-enter dummy with K to repeat the finesse,

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#12 User is offline   CSGibson 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 04:13

View Postnige1, on 2010-November-13, 03:14, said:

  • Bidding: 6 seems safer than 6 but not by much. Arguably, 6 is slightly preferrable at match-points. If you play that a jump to 2 over 1 shows 5+ and 4+ , then, later, you can make an informed choice of slam.
  • Play: I agree with rhm that LHO is unlikely to hold two singletons. Also LHO might not lead a singleton, holding Qxx; but LHO may have led 7 from a doubleton or tripleton. So I go with CSGibson's A, K, finesse J. If RHO has Qxxx, you can re-enter dummy with K to repeat the finesse,




On this particular hand, LHO had a small doubleton heart and a stiff club. I went down one through fairly normal play (win the lead with the A, to the A, run the J). Note: I think, since you cannot pick up Qxxx with LHO no matter how you play, that if you decide to play LHO for the Q of trump, it is important to cross with a and not a , especially at matchpoints where you can avoid the extra undertrick if LHO has a stiff and a small doubleton .
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#13 User is offline   dake50 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 08:29

Why would LHO make such an informative lead?
He can guess likely diamond is safe, spade is safe.
Leave declarer to his own resources.
I'm guessing a desperation lead,
eg. H:Qx C:Kxx
OR H:Qxx C:Kxx
OR H:xx C:Kx
How did he guess his partner has CK to get his C-ruff?
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#14 User is offline   mtvesuvius 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 08:34

View Postdake50, on 2010-November-13, 08:29, said:

Why would LHO make such an informative lead?
He can guess likely diamond is safe, spade is safe.
Leave declarer to his own resources.
I'm guessing a desperation lead,
eg. H:Qx C:Kxx
OR H:Qxx C:Kxx
OR H:xx C:Kx
How did he guess his partner has CK to get his C-ruff?

You've never led a singleton before?

IMO, LHO is very unlikely to have two stiffs. I win the A, and cross to hand with the A, and play A, and J, running it if ducked.
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#15 User is offline   rduran1216 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 11:21

I run the J first against almost any opposition. Q9x will probably cover, so if the Jack isn't covered im hopping up with the K and leading back to finesse the 10. I think this is fairly straightforward with this holding. Bad players cover Jacks with queens even more than good players, so thats that.
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#16 User is offline   pooltuna 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 12:11

View PostCSGibson, on 2010-November-11, 01:57, said:

Mostly I wanted people's opinion on how to play the trump suit. If you read the lead as a singleton, that presents a vacant spaces argument to finesse LHO for the Q, but you can pick up Qxxx with RHO by playing naturally. There is no need to ruff a diamond either way, since you have time to establish the clubs for a diamond pitch if you guess the trump Q right.


The way to play the trump suit has to be balanced by the probablity of a stiff. Would you really break the suit for the opps holding xxxx Qxx xxxxx x? This must be Bbradley's Barry Crane rule
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#17 User is offline   mtvesuvius 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 14:40

View Postpooltuna, on 2010-November-13, 12:11, said:

The way to play the trump suit has to be balanced by the probablity of a stiff. Would you really break the suit for the opps holding xxxx Qxx xxxxx x? This must be Bbradley's Barry Crane rule

Isn't there a bit of reverse psychology there as well? After all, if you lead a stiff and it is clear to the opponents that it is a stiff... Are they likely to play you for the Q? I'd do it from either one, and I suspect most experts would as well...
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#18 User is offline   dake50 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 15:46

"You've never led a singleton before?" -- mtvesuvius

I often lead single in opponents rebid suit
to ensure it gets established immediately.
I want declarer clued-in as best I can. (facetious -- seems that needs pointed out)
I cannot sense diamond is unclaimed,
nor spade is non-tenaced on this auction, can you? (again facetious)
Can anyone see those are both likely safe?
Would rather give no info to declarer than "Here's my single".
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#19 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 15:47

View Postmtvesuvius, on 2010-November-13, 08:34, said:

You've never led a singleton before?

IMO, LHO is very unlikely to have two stiffs. I win the A, and cross to hand with the A, and play A, and J, running it if ducked.


Why are u coming to hand with A, if u are going to cash A like i did ? Why not A and J straight forward ? Whats that about A that everyone comes to hand with ?

@ those who believes is not stiff ; Then take finesse and if not work, try to find , u can not play for both possibilities at 1st trick in this hand, since it extremely reduces the % lines if u do so. And if is not believed to be stiff, % line is to take [finesse], if fails play EAST for Qxxx . Playing A and then playing EAST for Qxxx is not as good as this line IF U believe lead was not stiff.
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#20 User is offline   CSGibson 

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Posted 2010-November-13, 19:40

View Postdake50, on 2010-November-13, 08:29, said:

How did he guess his partner has CK to get his C-ruff?


Possibly guessed through the cue-bidding sequence, since 1. South was willing to sign off over the 5 cue and 2. South failed to cue 6 over 5
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