West leads the queen of diamonds. East follows with the nine of diamonds, normal count. A tough hand from the Camrose and the number one ranked player in the country went off. What is your line?
Strip Club Play this Slam
#1
Posted 2024-March-04, 15:28
West leads the queen of diamonds. East follows with the nine of diamonds, normal count. A tough hand from the Camrose and the number one ranked player in the country went off. What is your line?
#2
Posted 2024-March-05, 01:12
Win the diamond in hand, run spade 8 (say it loses to East's Jack).
Win the diamond return in dummy. Cross over with low to ♥10 and play a low spade to dummy's 10.
If East has both spade honours, I lose --- down 3 if diamonds break 4-3 (presumably West did not lead from ♦Q from Qx)) or down 1 if they break 5-2 (longer with West).
Otherwise I make the contract
#3
Posted 2024-March-05, 02:28
shyams, on 2024-March-05, 01:12, said:
Win the diamond in hand, run spade 8 (say it loses to East's Jack).
Win the diamond return in dummy. Cross over with low to ♥10 and play a low spade to dummy's 10.
If East has both spade honours, I lose --- down 3 if diamonds break 4-3 (presumably West did not lead from ♦Q from Qx)) or down 1 if they break 5-2 (longer with West).
Otherwise I make the contract
I'm also wondering. If spades from the top to rely on club finesse if no honour falls, we gain if E holds QJx or E holds QJxx and the K of clubs. Finally, we may recover a part of 75% if W holds QJxx and the K of clubs and the club spots he pitches would prompt us to play for a squeeze. I don't know if combining these chances with the fall of Hx in spades would exceed 75% for double finesse.
#4
Posted 2024-March-05, 11:28
fuzzyquack, on 2024-March-05, 02:28, said:
Play spades from the top:
Probability that either spades are 3-3 (or 4-2/5-1 and an honour falls) = 60%
Probability that club finesse succeeds = 50% x 40% = 20%
Total probably of success playing spadesfrom the top = 80%
Double finesse in spades:
Probability that West has at least one honour = 76%
It seems that playing spades from the top has a 4% advantage.
(Ignores chances of a 6-0 heart break).
#5
Posted 2024-March-05, 12:06
Tramticket, on 2024-March-05, 11:28, said:
Probability that either spades are 3-3 (or 4-2/5-1 and an honour falls) = 60%
Probability that club finesse succeeds = 50% x 40% = 20%
Total probably of success playing spadesfrom the top = 80%
Double finesse in spades:
Probability that West has at least one honour = 76%
It seems that playing spades from the top has a 4% advantage.
(Ignores chances of a 6-0 heart break).
You don't get to take the club finesse if spades are 4-2 and the holder of the 4 cashes 2 of them. If you don't play the 3rd round, you don't make if they're 3-3 with split honours and the club finesse is wrong.
#6
Posted 2024-March-05, 19:16
finessing right away is how you play for 4 spade tricks, not 3. The gain is marginal but marginal gains can be decisive and catering to them is one of the distinguishing characteristics of expert declarer play. Cashing a top spade caters to stiff Q or J or QJ tight offside...sure, that's low percentage but it costs nothing (in terms of trying to make 6N) to play that way
edit: I shouldn't post after a good dinner accompanied by good wine, lol. we don't have the entries to cash a top spade...we do so, cross in hearts, lead the spade 9 and see it covered...if we win and lead towards our 8, we can't get back to dummy. sorry about the bad post.
#7
Posted 2024-March-06, 08:28
Tramticket, on 2024-March-05, 11:28, said:
I used the calculators on RPBridge website ("Card Combination Analyzer"). According to it, the % of success is 69.44%. I think I was careful in my calcs. but please feel free to double check.
Tramticket, on 2024-March-05, 11:28, said:
Probability that West has at least one honour = 76%
This % exactly matches what RPBridge calculator shows.
#8
Posted 2024-March-06, 10:43
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#9
Posted 2024-March-06, 11:27
So, ♦A, ♥x to ♥10, ♠x to dummy's ♠A, then run 5 more hearts.
Last 5 cards:
North: ♠K10x ♥-- ♦x ♣x
South: ♠x ♥-- ♦Kx ♣AQ
Someone can be endplayed if (a) they started with both minors, or (b) they started with both black suits (incl. ♣K). One has to read the cards and guess correctly... not sure if this works out to the >76% odds associated with two spade finesses.
#10
Posted 2024-March-09, 07:15
Against Charlie the Chimp, I play for him to have smoothly bared the king of clubs, but feigned discomfort before baring the jack of clubs ... Although he might be double-bluffing ...mind games with ChCh
#11
Posted 2024-March-15, 14:30
mikeh, on 2024-March-05, 19:16, said:
finessing right away is how you play for 4 spade tricks, not 3. The gain is marginal but marginal gains can be decisive and catering to them is one of the distinguishing characteristics of expert declarer play. Cashing a top spade caters to stiff Q or J or QJ tight offside...sure, that's low percentage but it costs nothing (in terms of trying to make 6N) to play that way
edit: I shouldn't post after a good dinner accompanied by good wine, lol. we don't have the entries to cash a top spade...we do so, cross in hearts, lead the spade 9 and see it covered...if we win and lead towards our 8, we can't get back to dummy. sorry about the bad post.
mikeh, on 2024-March-05, 19:16, said:
finessing right away is how you play for 4 spade tricks, not 3. The gain is marginal but marginal gains can be decisive and catering to them is one of the distinguishing characteristics of expert declarer play. Cashing a top spade caters to stiff Q or J or QJ tight offside...sure, that's low percentage but it costs nothing (in terms of trying to make 6N) to play that way
edit: I shouldn't post after a good dinner accompanied by good wine, lol. we don't have the entries to cash a top spade...we do so, cross in hearts, lead the spade 9 and see it covered...if we win and lead towards our 8, we can't get back to dummy. sorry about the bad post.
I THINK this is my line but I cannot (in my wee brain) untwist the wording you used.
trick 1 win lead in hand
trick 2 lead spade to A
trick 3 heart to T
trick 4 lead spade intending to take double finesse. One of three things will happen (sigh i hate so many branches).
1. an honor shows up from lho
we cover the honor and lead low from dummy to our 9 with the dia ace as an entry back to dummy. making 6.
2. small from lho we finesse (if it holds we make 6) so assuming it loses.
trick 5 whatever the defense we come back to our hand via the club ace and take another spade finesse. Making 6 or down several tricks (ouch). Losing to RHO QJx or QJxx
3. lho shows out (hehe haha why does the optimist in me think a mere 76+ % chance could possibly work?). There are no reasonable squeezes left so IMHO I would rise with the
Top spade and immediately take the club finesse. Making 6 or down 2. Loses to RHO QJxxx and club K with LHO.