This post has been edited by nige1: 2019-October-23, 19:05
Tram-lines 2 Another hard problem
#2
Posted 2019-October-23, 14:46
#3
Posted 2019-October-23, 18:40
#5
Posted 2019-October-24, 18:11
Charles Outred discoveed the hidden depths of this beautiful deal.
Cyberyeti has correctly reconstructed the East-West hands.
West leads ♥9 against your 5♠ contract won by dummy's ♥A as East follows with ♥K. You successfully finesse ♠Q and cash ♠A, West discarding ♣4 (odd or encouraging). When you exit in ♥, West discards ♣7 and East wins with ♥6.
Plan the play if
1. East exits with ♦T
2. East exits with ♣K.
Thomas Gray said:
The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear:
Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,
And waste its sweetness on the desert air.
#6
Posted 2019-October-25, 03:33
#8
Posted 2019-October-25, 13:37
As CyberYeti correctly points out...
If East exits with ♦T, you reduce to the ending on the left, where the last trump fixes West.
This is a simple squeeze without the count
Again, CyberYeti points out the solution.
If East removes your entry to dummy by returning the ♣K, you come down to the ending on the left.
West is now squeezed when you play ♠5 to dummy's ♠6, if West pitches a ♦, you play on ♦s, if he pitches a ♣, you ruff out his remaining ♣ and end-play him in ♦s.
What we might call a shape-shifter squeeze
#9
Posted 2019-October-25, 14:54
Cyberyeti, on 2019-October-25, 03:33, said:
I like to simplify deals to high-light the key-points
e.g. I make South declarer and ♠s trumps.
But I often introduce errors when I try to do so. Sorry.
CyberYeti sussed it out, in spite of my mistakes.
I'm aware I could have simplified it more (as on the left).
West leads ♥9 against your 5♠ contract, won by dummy's ♥A as East follows with ♥K.
You successfully finesse ♠Q and cash ♠A, West discarding ♣6 (odd or encouraging).
When you exit in ♥, West discards ♣7 and East wins with ♥6.
Plan the play if1. East exits with ♦T2. East exits with ♣K.
#10
Posted 2019-October-26, 03:44
Please advise me if I'm wrong (which probably I am).
#11
Posted 2019-October-26, 04:06
FelicityR, on 2019-October-26, 03:44, said:
Please advise me if I'm wrong (which probably I am).
It's not a stepping stone, a stepping stone is where you force an opponent to give you access to a winner in a hand you can't get to yourself because you don't have a card in the suit.
#12
Posted 2019-October-26, 11:00
#13
Posted 2019-October-26, 12:39
msjennifer, on 2019-October-26, 11:00, said:
A criss cross is slightly different again in its standard form A, Qx in one hand Qx, A in the other, looking to catch the guy with Kx, Kx where which ace you cash next depends on what he discards, and it operates with no more tricks to lose.
Charles Outred was intrigued by this difficult deal from a team-match. West leads ♥9 against your 5♠ contract won by dummy's ♥A as East follows with ♥K. You successfully finesse ♠Q and cash ♠A, West discarding ♣4 (odd or encouraging). When you exit in ♥, West discards ♣7 and East wins with ♥6. Plan the play if
1. East exits with ♦T
2. East exits with ♣K.
If you feel brave, please have a go, at single-dummy, but I'll post the full deal in a day or two, when you can try it at double-dummy. I found it difficult, even with sight of all 4 hands
[North hand corrected, in the light of CyberYeti's post]