pclayton, on May 6 2008, 10:33 AM, said:
Here's a fascinating hand I watched on VG yesterday.
| Dealer: | North | | Vul: | N/S | | Scoring: | IMP | | | |
You play in 4
♥. LHO butts in with a Sandwich NT showing at least 5-5 in the blacks. Your partner decides not to play for penalties and you end up in a tenuous 4
♥ contract.
LHO leads the
♦10, A, 2, 4.
Plan the play for the first few tricks.
This is a BRUTALLY complicated hand!!! I'm pretty sure I can make whenever LHO has 5125 shape. I'm not sure about other shapes.
DK, D ruffed, CAK, and a H to the T. Now if LHO started with Kxxxx, J, Tx, JT9xx, the position will be as shown, with LHO to lead, and with us needing 6 of the remaining 8 tricks:
On a club return we cash the CQ and DK, ruff a diamond and play ace and a spade. We have HA98 over HKQ7, duck trick 11 and claim.
On a low spade return we fly T and play as above.
On the SK return we win and play a spade to the T. RHO has to ruff, else we round up as above. If RHO returns a trump we win and drive out his trumps. If RHO returns a plain card we cash the remaining plain card winner in dummy, ruff a diamond, and we are left with HA98 over HKQ7 again.
If RHO has all three trump honors, and the HT holds we cash the SA and play the H9 back.
If RHO has all three trump honors and splits we win the HA and cash the SA. The position is now, with us to lead, and with us requiring 4 of the remaining 7 tricks:
and we play a high trump from hand. RHO is now caught as follows.
RHO can allow us to make two trump tricks, drawing RHO's trumps simultaneously, after which we just drive out the SK. LHO can then either let us take the two high spades in our hand or the two winners on the table.
Alternatively, RHO can return a plain card upon winning a trump, allowing us access to the two winners on the table. Now a plain suit lead from the table lets us make two trump tricks.
The point of the variations where LHO has a stiff H honor is to force the defenders to assist in stripping RHO of diamonds, then force RHO to ruff our spade loser, simultaneously endplaying him in trumps.
"It is not enough to be a good player. You must also play well." -- Tarrasch