Mandatory Falsecarding may expand into randomising if there is interest
#1
Posted 2012-August-02, 06:47
To start off, I am going to include the examples that Justin gave in the stem thread. Please jump in with further examples!
A. Offering a pin play (or drop)
1. You hold T9x and Dummy on your right holds AJ8xx. Play the T or 9. (If Declarer holds Qxx (partner Kx) then this gives the losing option of playing for T9 doubleton).
2. You hold JTx. Declarer has a suit of AQ9xxxxx opposite a void (either way) giving partner Kx. Drop the J or T under the ace. (This gives Declarer the losing option of playing for JT doubleton).
3. You hold JTx. Declarer holds x on your left and KQ98xxx on your right. When Declarer plays up to the K or Q you must drop an honour. (This give Declarer a guess as to whether we started with JTx opp Ax or JT opp Axx.)
4. You hold Txx. Declarer has Ax on your left and KJ98x on your right. Drop the T under the ace to give Declarer the chance of playing you for QT bare. (Otherwise Declarer will have to play partner for Qxx to pick up the suit.)
B. Offering a two-way finesse
1. You hold J9xx. Declarer holds AK8x on your right and QTxx on your left. Drop the 9 under the ace to set up a two-way finesse for the jack.
2. As above but AKTx on your left and Q8xx on your right.
3. You hold KJx. Declarer has Axx on your left and QT98 on your right and plays up to the T on the first round. Win the king to allow Declarer to finesse partner for the jack. (If you win the J Declarer has no choice but to finesse you for the K.)
C. Creating a losing finesse position
1. You hold KT. Declarer has AQxxx on your left and J9x on your right. When Declarer leads low to the Q you must play the king. (This gives Declarer the losing option of finessing the 9, playing your partner for Txxx.)
2. You hold QT. Declarer has AKxxx on your left and J9x on your right. When Declarer leads low to the AK you must play the queen. (This gives Declarer the losing option of finessing the 9, playing your partner for Txxx.)
3. You hold JTx with AK9xxx on your right. When Declarer plays the queen from your left, drop an honour. (This gives Declarer the option of playing us for a singleton and taking the finesse.)
4. You hold KT8x. Declarer has Q9xx left and AJ7x right. When Declarer finesses the J you can try dropping the 8 under it. (This gives Declarer the possibility of trying to run the Q next, potentially creating a second trick in the suit.
5. You hold QJ9x. Declarer has KT876 on your left and Axx to the right. When Declarer plays a small card on your left, play the 9. (This gives Declarer the option of going up with the K to try running the T.)
6. You hold KJ bare with AQxxx on our left and T8x on our right (partner 9xx). Declarer leads the x from our right. Playing the K means Declarer will most likely play to the T allowing our J to win a trick.
7. You hold Jx with AKTx on your left and declarer on your right has shown 5. When declarer plays up to the AKT it cannot hurt to drop the jack. If partner holds Qx then declarer might decide you split honours and finesse on the second round.
Not quite falsecarding but related is the concept of playing the card you are known to hold. Some examples of this (there are probably too many to include them all):
D: Playing the known card
1. You hold T8x with AJ9xx on your left. Declarer finesses the 9 drawing an honour from partner. When Declarer now plays towards the AJxx you must play the T. (Declarer might now play you for HTx.)
2. You hold QTx. Declarer has AJx on your left with K9xx on your right and begins by finessing the J. When Declarer play the A on the second round you must play the Q. (Declarer can play you for Qx bare.)
E: Non-mandatory falsecards
1. Winning a trick with the ace instead of the queen from AQx(x) to encourage declarer to continue the suit when you can see another suit is breaking well for her/him.
2. Dropping an honour to encourage declarer to use up an important entry. As an example, you hold JTxx with K98x on your left and AQ76 on your right. If you drop the jack, declarer will almost certainly cross to the king next.
In addition, if there is interest we could also add standard positions where you must randomise your cards. I suspect that might be a large topic though and perhaps a separate thread for it would be better - opinions gladly accepted on this.
#2
Posted 2012-August-02, 08:10
Another one which I guess goes under C. You have JTx and AK9xxx is to your right, Qx to your left; playing an honour under the queen sets up a losing finesse.
#3
Posted 2012-August-02, 08:41
Don't forget the "card you are known to hold" positions:
AJ9xx
T8x KQ
7xx
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#4
Posted 2012-August-02, 08:54
Phil, on 2012-August-02, 08:41, said:
Don't forget the "card you are known to hold" positions:
AJ9xx
T8x KQ
7xx
Is this one that when south leads a card west should put the T up to play the "known" card even before it is known?
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#5
Posted 2012-August-02, 09:09
#6
Posted 2012-August-02, 09:16
BunnyGo, on 2012-August-02, 08:54, said:
After:
- low, low, 9, honor
and declarer leads low again, West needs to play the T (card you are know to hold (hereafter called "CYAKTH") from the remaining T-8. If West plays small, declarer cannot pick up an original holding of QT8x, so the only chance is to play the A hoping for KQ off. The T provides a losing option.
The T on the 1st round is an interesting gambit from some holdings, but lets not get ahead of ourselves.
(stares at a rabbit hole and wonders whether or not he should jump down into it)
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#7
Posted 2012-August-02, 09:19
east must contribute the K instead of the J when led from dummy
#8
Posted 2012-August-02, 09:20
Antrax, on 2012-August-02, 09:09, said:
Declarer always has 1 loser in the suit. If the suit is split as described Kx/JTx, then after the small cards fall on the ace Declarer has no choice but to play a small card next and jope that the king drops. Then the Q takes the remaining J/T. If the J or T is played to the first trick then Declarer can play either for Kx/JTx or for Kxx/JT. The former requires a small card while the latter requires the queen.
On Phil's example, I am assuming Declarer plays the intrafinesse to the 9, crosses back to hand and then plays up again. Playing the ten now means Declarer has to guess between partner having KQ bare or H8, whereas if we play the 8 the only 3-2 split possible in KQ bare. I will wait for confirmation before adding it to the first post though. Bunny's idea would never have occurred to me without it being mentioned!
#9
Posted 2012-August-02, 09:22
Antrax, on 2012-August-02, 09:09, said:
With
void
opposite
AQ987654
Declarer leads the Ace and sees the 3 and 2. The only hope is to drop Kx and lead low. If he sees the J (the T is parallel), he cannot pick up J / KT32, so the choices are to play for KJ/Txx, Kx/JTx (with the falsecard) or Kxx / JT. There is no losing option after the 3 and 2, but the J/T create a losing option.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2012-August-02, 13:52
KQ98xxx
Ax JTx
x
Defender should play J or T.
Also:
AJ7x
x KT8x
Q9xx
Defender should play the 8 when declarer leads to the J. Arguably doesn't count because declarer should just lead low to the Q next if they only need 3 tricks, but maybe it is matchpoints or they are greedy or don't know how many tricks they need.
But not:
AJ7x
Kx T8x OR K8x Tx
Q9xx
Playing the 8 on the first round all the time is inferior and allows declarer to increase their chances if they know the defender does that (but not if both defenders always do it).
#11
Posted 2012-August-02, 14:57
Declarer has KT876 opp Axx. He leads low towards the KT876, now with QJ9x you play the 9. This gives him the option of playing the king and running the ten. If you play low he will be forced to play the 8 (or the ten if he wanted to take a big view, which would work).
#12
Posted 2012-August-02, 15:03
AKQ98
xx
when they cash the ace, drop the ten or jack from JTx off. Similar to the theme described in the OP.
#13
Posted 2012-August-02, 16:59
There are a lot where you hold AQX over the KJT, say, and if you win the Q declarer must fall back on another line (which you can see will work), so instead you must win with the A when declarer plays to the J. You hope next time declarer will repeat the finesse instead of taking a winning finesse in a different suit if you won with the Q.
#14
Posted 2012-August-02, 18:12
KJ98x
Qxx Txx
Ax
- billw55
#15
Posted 2012-August-02, 18:38
lalldonn, on 2012-August-02, 18:12, said:
KJ98x
Qxx Txx
Ax
heh, true I guess this qualifies as a mandatory falsecard if declarer needs 5 tricks in the suit since if the ten doesnt drop they have to play for Qxx onside, and if the T does drop, they can play for QT doubleton.
This play worked in real life because it allowed declarer (bessis!) to combine chances in a 6N contract, whereas if the ten didnt drop he wouldnt have that option.
This shows that it doesnt really matter if you have many of these obscure ones memorized, at the table if you can recognize "if i drop the ten he would have 5 tricks if I had QT..." that is good enough
#16
Posted 2012-August-03, 05:30
#17
Posted 2012-August-03, 09:04
Zelandakh, on 2012-August-03, 05:30, said:
Ducking would be a nice play, and would give declarer a losing option - one I would almost certainly fall for if pulled off smoothly (I'm gullible). I put this type of thing in the same category as playing the 8 from KT8x when declarer plays to the AJx with Q97xx in hand.
#19
Posted 2012-August-03, 17:31
Zelandakh, on 2012-August-03, 05:30, said:
To really mess with your head, consider that with J9 you could play the jack. If you did, partner must with the K with Kxx.
#20
Posted 2012-August-04, 19:59
phil_20686, on 2012-August-02, 16:59, said:
There are a lot where you hold AQX over the KJT, say, and if you win the Q declarer must fall back on another line (which you can see will work), so instead you must win with the A when declarer plays to the J. You hope next time declarer will repeat the finesse instead of taking a winning finesse in a different suit if you won with the Q.
Or similarly how about winning the K or Q when you hold KQT(x...) over dummy's AJ9 and declarer plays low to the 9, trying to entice declarer into finessing against the other high honor later.
(Today an opponent decided to win the Q from QTxxx in this position; that was rather less effective. )
#21
Posted 2012-August-17, 08:06