play 3NT
#1
Posted 2013-January-08, 04:32
AJ10xx
Qxx
x
KQxx
xx
KJx
AQ7x
J10xx
Red against white you decide to pass the south hand in first seat. The auction continues:
p - 1D - 1S - 2D
p - p - Dbl - p
3NT - all pass
2NT on the second round would have been a spade raise so that was not an option. Perhaps you should have doubled 2D planning to bid 2NT. Or perhaps you should have passed out 2DX. In any case you find yourself in 3NT. LHO leads the king of spades. How do you make optimal use of this poor lead?
While experts might well enjoy the hand I posted this for I/A players.
- hrothgar
#2
Posted 2013-January-08, 13:49
I could try winning the opening lead and knocking out the ace of clubs. Say west has it; he leads a heart to his partner's ace for a diamond through. I fly ace and play a spade up and run clubs but I think West can always beat it if he discards correctly.
#3
Posted 2013-January-08, 15:12
han, on 2013-January-08, 04:32, said:
...
LHO leads the king of spades.
quiddity, on 2013-January-08, 13:49, said:
#4
Posted 2013-January-09, 09:08
As the cards lie the contract cannot be beaten after the king of spades lead. I merely mentioned the level of the opponents to explain the lead. Perhaps LHO forgot that your partner had bid spades.
If you you cannot make the contract with the layout you imagined, try a more optimistic view.
- hrothgar
#6
Posted 2013-January-09, 15:54
If LHO shows up with both aces then things change, but I would need to know how the play went before deciding whether to try the diamond finesse or an endplay.
#7
Posted 2013-January-09, 21:48
han, on 2013-January-08, 04:32, said:
AJ10xx
Qxx
x
KQxx
xx
KJx
AQ7x
J10xx
Red against white you decide to pass the south hand in first seat. The auction continues:
p - 1D - 1S - 2D
p - p - Dbl - p
3NT - all pass
2NT on the second round would have been a spade raise so that was not an option. Perhaps you should have doubled 2D planning to bid 2NT. Or perhaps you should have passed out 2DX. In any case you find yourself in 3NT. LHO leads the king of spades. How do you make optimal use of this poor lead?
While experts might well enjoy the hand I posted this for I/A players.
#9
Posted 2013-January-10, 06:44
Fluffy, on 2013-January-10, 04:18, said:
If the Queen were the King (sounds like the beginning of a joke about royals) then I think that I have two spades, two hearts two diamonds and three clubs. There are issues of timing, but I think I can do it. Similarly, holding AQ, if the King is on my right. Is it likely that it is.
Every problem has some sort of context/assumptions. At the table, I would probably at least consider that the Kinf of spades lead is some (mis-)inspired lead from Kx. Maybe I should consider that anyway, but I thought I was being steered away from it by the posing of the problem. Also, with regard to diamonds, there is a general rule. In a posed bridge problem the answer is never take the finesse. The opponents have been playing for a year we are told. I would think that the default, with those who have been playing for a week, would be that if a suit is bid and raised this is an attractive lead, but I can see why a player might rethink this against a strongly bid NT when he holds Kxx(x). But I wouldn't expect him to rethink it so far as to prefer a lead of the K from Kx.
Anyway, the opponents have 17 highs. Seems to me Jxxx(x) and an outside Ace justifies a raise to 2♦ so I have been assuming this as the hand. If so, once both my diamond transportation and my spade transportation are destroyed, I don't see ho to make this.
So maybe it's time to rethink my assumptions. I guess if the lead was from KQx I can do this, but that's silly. Or so it seems to me. I will try to clear my mind and simply look at it as a problem w/o guidance, since perhaps the guidance, misunderstood, is giving me a blind spot.
Later, man. The day is just dawning.
#11
Posted 2013-January-10, 07:03
#12
Posted 2013-January-10, 07:24
- hrothgar
#13
Posted 2013-January-10, 10:56
quiddity, on 2013-January-09, 15:54, said:
Looks like a good start to me.
#14
Posted 2013-January-10, 14:37
I seem to have lost the ability to hide things, so spoiler comments are below in plain sight.
Either 4+0+2+3 or 2+2+2+3, depending on the choice made. Hence Bishop Morton and his fork. Win the spade, lead a small club. If the Jack wins, lead the spade spot toward the board. W must duck, else we have our four spade winners with time and entries in clubs to get them. If W goes up, this is the 4+0+2+3 case. After he ducks, we have two spades and we develop the clubs and hearts for the 2+2+2+3 case. . Simple enough. If the first club is taken by the ace and a red card comes back we will win and now we can get to hand with a club and lead a spade. Same result.
Given the non-diamond lead I could not imagine the king being on my right.So I spent my time figuring how to endplay W, with all of the problems that have been mentioned.
The tricky aspect here is that you can almost succeed with the King offside, and you can succeed if the opponents don't get it right. But after the spade lead, yes, it always makes as long as you play for the King of Diamonds onside.
Moral: If the King must be onside, it is onside.
#16
Posted 2013-January-12, 22:05
my first guess is west has something close to:
KQxx..Axx...KJxx...xx
I guess the opp will get one s, one h, one d and one c and I need to endplay west somehow.....just not sure how....
perhaps I should take the first spade and try for some kind of endplay later.... and not duck trick one.
so I will try....AS and club from dummy?
#17
Posted 2013-January-13, 09:45
After that lead, I think I can always take 3 spades + 2 hearts + 1 diamond + 3 clubs or 2 spades + 2 hearts + 2 diamonds + 3 clubs if LHO has KQxx Axxx Kxx xx or KQxx xxxx Kxx Ax or KQxx Axxx xxx Ax.
If RHO gets in with the CA or HA and leads diamonds, I will play the ace and continue my plan.