After 2 tricks lost on heart. east plays ten of club. How to play for making 5
an interesting hand, at least for me
#1
Posted 2022-June-15, 02:05
After 2 tricks lost on heart. east plays ten of club. How to play for making 5
#2
Posted 2022-June-15, 02:21
#3
Posted 2022-June-15, 02:27
AL78, on 2022-June-15, 02:21, said:
West play ace and then 2 for k of east
#4
Posted 2022-June-15, 02:32
#5
Posted 2022-June-15, 03:16
All you have to do here is pick one black suit - say spades - and count how many the opponents are throwing. At the end, if they've thrown too many, your small spade will be good. If they haven't, maybe they threw too many clubs, and your last club is good.
They're squeezed if they're *forced* to do one of those things, but you don't even have to know that - as long as you keep both options alive as long as possible. Even when the opponents aren't squeezed, they may throw the wrong thing!
(If you're not at that point of having to win all the tricks, and you can't see any way to get more, try losing tricks until you are.)
#6
Posted 2022-June-15, 03:34
smerriman, on 2022-June-15, 03:16, said:
Well there's the other very simple position that usually arises when you know the position of a particular card from the bidding where this is not true that is the other one that beginners should learn (known as a strip squeeze).
Assume E opened the bidding so you know he has ♠K and ♥AQ (W has 2 hearts higher than the 7), you need 3 tricks and unfortunately you're not in N to lead a heart, but in S.
You cash the diamond A and now what can E discard from ♠KJ ♥AQ ? if he discards a spade you drop his K, if he discards a heart, you exit with a low heart and he has to lead into your ♠AQ.
#8
Posted 2022-June-15, 08:33
smerriman, on 2022-June-15, 03:16, said:
All you have to do here is pick one black suit - say spades - and count how many the opponents are throwing. At the end, if they've thrown too many, your small spade will be good. If they haven't, maybe they threw too many clubs, and your last club is good.
Love's book gives good advice here. Don't count anything. Just watch the ♣ discards. Has everything higher than the 6 been played? If yes, you are done. If not, what is there to do except see if the ♠s are running?
This won't work for all squeezes. But it shows where "automatic squeezes" got their name.
#9
Posted 2022-June-15, 08:43
AL78, on 2022-June-15, 02:21, said:
Why do you say East has to have no more than a doubleton in either suit? I imagine you are right, but I can't see why.
#11
Posted 2022-June-15, 08:59
#14
Posted 2022-June-15, 12:12
#15
Posted 2022-June-15, 12:19
bluenikki, on 2022-June-15, 12:11, said:
That cannot be the best line even if you are correct and West holds the queen. If East only holds a singleton which is where finessing works and trying to drop doesn't, they will hold at least three cards in one of the black suits and the necessary squeeze will not work. You have to ignore the possibility of ♦QXX with West because you are going down on that layout. The important holdings are whether East holds XX, QX or QXX assuming West follows on the first round (you have to play East for at least two diamonds), and I'm guessing the pre-empt makes it more likely East holds two rather than three diamonds, so the correct line is try and drop the queen.
#16
Posted 2022-June-15, 16:08
bluenikki, on 2022-June-15, 08:33, said:
Well, this still requires counting, just that you're now looking at how many cards there were above 6 to begin with, and then counting them down one by one each time one is played.
But yes, my point was that you only need to be focused on a single suit.
#17
Posted 2022-June-15, 17:06