Your lead, and why? Thanks
Your lead & why?
#1
Posted 2023-May-03, 09:05
Your lead, and why? Thanks
#2
Posted 2023-May-03, 10:01
Given how poorly all the cards seem to lie for declarer, I will make the most passive lead I can find. Second (distant) choice would be a club, but you often find declarer has a partial club fit but does not want to go past three no trump.
#3
Posted 2023-May-03, 10:45
Why the 8?
I'll try to answer. 10 would promise top of sequence. 5 or 6 looks like low from strength?
#4
Posted 2023-May-03, 10:54
The problem with leading a club is that, even if we successfully finesse through dummy's long suit and partner can win cheaply (the best case scenario), partner likely can't continue the suit and we cannot lead it a second time later. Leading singletons against 3NT is almost always a bad idea - the suit rates to not establish. Also looking at our hand partner likely has 3-4 spades and 2-3 hearts, and it is unlikely we can set up either of them through active play but not through passive play. So a diamond it is.
Most pairs have agreements about leading from Txxx (for some this is considered Hxxx, for others xxxx). I would not lead the ten, that might blow a trick. Every other card is fine, so play the one that your partnership has agreed to lead from this holding.
#5
Posted 2023-May-03, 12:08
At the table (with screens or online, so I’m not conveying info to partner) I’d ask whether they have agreements about the length promised by 3C (for me, 3+) and what a 3D bid by south would have meant, over 3C.
At imps, I think I’d lead a spade as the best chance of beating the contract. I’d like to have K108x but I don’t, so I’ll just hope partner has good spots, plus at least the queen. It’s unlikely, if the opps are competent, that south has five spades. 3N prevents opener from bidding 4S with say 3=5=1=4 shape (imo, anyway). On a good day, partner has AQx and declarer Jxxx, and we can not only cash four tricks but also force two discards from dummy before declarer knows how the round suits break.
At mps, I think the spade too risky. While I think it most likely to lead to a plus, I also think it’s most likely to blow a trick…those thoughts are not contradictory. They simply reflect the high variance I accord to the lead of a spade
So at mps I’ll try to make the ‘normal’ lead, which is, I think, a low diamond.
Definitely not a club, btw. Not merely because I’ll never be able to lead another but also because there are too many holdings on which we blow a trick and/or a tempo, plus once discovers we led a stiff (which may happen as early as trick 2), a good declarer may be able to infer our lead problem. And, of course, we have the likely unenviable task of finding a non-fatal discard.
#7
Posted 2023-May-03, 15:24
Opposite a good player who can look at the dummy, recall the bidding, think about the problems I might have had and the problems declaring is having, I'll lead a low diamond. (It's the 5 in all my current partnerships, but someone could twist my arm into playing 3rd/low even at NT.)
Opposite a partner who is likely to just return the suit if you lead a low-ish card, or who might think a little bit but not really figure things out, I'll lead the 8; in such a partnership we're also likely to have the agreement that the T is not an honor for "4th best promises an honor" purposes.
Opposite a partner who is just going to return my opening lead no matter what, I lead a spade.
#8
Posted 2023-May-03, 16:27
#9
Posted 2023-May-03, 20:08
I led ♦5, who knew I was leading into a 5 card suit.
When we were reviewing the hand and trying to tighten up our leads, it was interesting to see everyone with the same auction to 3NT led either ♦ 8 or 5.
the only pair to find the killer ♠3 lead was after an auction 1♥ 2♦ 3♣ 3nt
#10
Posted 2023-May-03, 21:43
#11
Posted 2023-May-03, 22:14
However, on cursory examination, I think good defence gets to five tricks before even double dummy play gets to nine. I’d be interested in finding out where I’m wrong.
#12
Posted 2023-May-04, 00:09
the hog, on 2023-May-03, 21:43, said:
It isn't because the spade lead kills the entry to the diamonds declarer has to establish.
On the given auction there is no way I am finding a spade lead from a broken honor sequence into what sounds like declarer's primary suit, but that is why I am not world class.
#13
Posted 2023-May-04, 00:27
#14
Posted 2023-May-04, 01:01
AL78, on 2023-May-04, 00:09, said:
I would say a greater display of skill is seeing a spade is the only way to beat the contract double dummy, and being happy that you *didn't* lead it. (In general that is; whether that's the case here, I don't know.)
#15
Posted 2023-May-04, 01:40
the hog, on 2023-May-03, 21:43, said:
Double dummy yes, single dummy you need to decide W has a small singleton club rather than J or Jx and lead a small club off the dummy on the first round to make the 10 your entry back to hand.
Note leading 8♦ rather than a small one should encourage E to duck which makes it a bit more awkward for S
#16
Posted 2023-May-04, 05:46
Win, play the diamond King. It does east no good to duck. Now a spade to West whose best effort is a heart, preferably the 9. It’s not double dummy to win and play a low club…on the heart switch it does no good to play for Jx in clubs…you can get to your ten but then can’t get back to dummy. So the choice is between an unlikely stiff Jack or a roughly 50% hope for east to hold the Jack.
Now south has 1 spade, two diamonds, two hearts and four clubs. The defence gets two spades, one diamond and one club.
But best defence, which truly is double dummy, is the lead of the heart 9. Whether a low heart works as well is too tough for me at 4:46 am.
I don’t think there’s any way home now.
#17
Posted 2023-May-04, 07:59
♠ 7 J K 6
♥ 5 A 6 8
♣ A 6 4 3
♣ K 8 7 ♦8
♣ Q 9 T ♦5
♣ 2 J ♦ 3 6
♠ 4 A 5 ♥2
♦ K T 4 2
♠ 9 T ♥4 ♦ 9
♥ 3 K 7 ♦ 7
♣ 5 ♦ A J ♥ 9
♥ T Q ♦ Q ♥ J
Mike, double dummy says 3N-1 on a small spade lead , East must duck your ♦K return
#18
Posted 2023-May-04, 09:06
jillybean, on 2023-May-04, 07:59, said:
♠ 7 J K 6
♥ 5 A 6 8
♣ A 6 4 3
♣ K 8 7 ♦8
♣ Q 9 T ♦5
♣ 2 J ♦ 3 6
♠ 4 A 5 ♥2
♦ K T 4 2
♠ 9 T ♥4 ♦ 9
♥ 3 K 7 ♦ 7
♣ 5 ♦ A J ♥ 9
♥ T Q ♦ Q ♥ J
Mike, double dummy says 3N-1 on a small spade lead , East must duck your ♦K return
Goes to show that I shouldn’t analyze at 4:30 am. East ducks the first diamond, south needs a second diamond so leads the queen and east wins and returns another? If south won an early spade, west has an entry in spades for the diamond 10 to win. If south ducks the first two spades, west switches to hearts and tgey have time to build a heart trick. Ironically that’s what my initial cursory look suggested but by 4:30 am I’d forgotten the play to set up a second defensive diamond trick.
#19
Posted 2023-May-04, 09:16
This link to the HR and double dummy may work, if you click on the little camera icon on the right, it takes you to handviewer
http://www.auckland....&board=1&pair=9
4:30am is usually not a good time for bridge hands for me either.
#20
Posted 2023-May-04, 16:13
mikeh, on 2023-May-04, 05:46, said:
I don’t think there’s any way home now.
This is a really good example of why it's extremely dangerous to look at double dummy scores, backing up what you pointed out in the other thread. Double dummy says that West leading a low spade at trick 1 is the only way to defeat the contract.
If West instead leads a heart - whether the 9 or low - the contract is makeable.. by winning in dummy and immediately leading low to the ten of clubs! If a declarer did that I'd be pretty suspicious