There are 52 cards in a pack, and 52 net IMPs (gain+loss) were at stake on two consecutive boards of the Zimmerman Cup final. Look over Meckstroth's shoulder and advise him here how to play 6NT on the ten of spades lead (high from a doubleton).
Take 1 26 IMPs on the play
#1
Posted 2018-February-23, 19:24
There are 52 cards in a pack, and 52 net IMPs (gain+loss) were at stake on two consecutive boards of the Zimmerman Cup final. Look over Meckstroth's shoulder and advise him here how to play 6NT on the ten of spades lead (high from a doubleton).
#2
Posted 2018-February-23, 19:56
lamford, on 2018-February-23, 19:24, said:
Thank you Paul. Guess: Win ♠A. Cash ♣AK because If ♣ break 2-2, you are home (7 x ♣ + 2 X ♦ + 1 X ♥ + 2 X ♠).
When ♣ are 3-1, concede a ♣, presumably to South, chucking a ♠. Win the ♦ return with ♦A. Cash ♠K, throwing a ♥. Cross to ♦K. Cash ♣s, hoping for a show-up double-squeeze.
#3
Posted 2018-February-23, 20:09
nige1, on 2018-February-23, 19:56, said:
When ♣ are 3-1, concede a ♣, presumably to South. Win the ♦ return with ♦A. Cash ♠K. Cross to ♦K. Cash ♣s, hoping for a show-up double-squeeze.
That will only work if North cannot guard against the five of diamonds, as in the three-card ending, you have to throw the spade and then the ten of diamonds, and South can guard hearts and North has a diamond guard. You will almost always need the king of hearts onside. You will always make it when it is onside I think as North will be simple squeezed.
#4
Posted 2018-February-23, 20:30
lamford, on 2018-February-23, 20:09, said:
True. I hope to take advantage of the slight chance that North is dealt, say
♠Q x x x x x ♥ J x x x ♦ Q x ♣ Q
#5
Posted 2018-February-23, 21:26
nige1, on 2018-February-23, 20:30, said:
♠Q x x x x x ♥ J x x x ♦ Q x ♣ Q
Yes, but what I think is the best line still works with that layout.
#6
Posted 2018-February-23, 22:12
Also, being in the expert forum, I'm going to allow myself the use of the GIB button while playing around with hands, since I'm not an expert
If South does indeed hold the heart king, it seems that the contract can always be made by ducking a club immediately (even if clubs are 2-2) - and in most cases this is the only line that works.
Assuming a diamond is returned, we win with the Ace, then run clubs. On the last club, North has to keep SQx and two other cards.
If North keeps two diamonds, then we have to discard the heart Queen and play to the heart Ace; the spade K then squeezes south in hearts and diamonds, with the 9 of hearts the threat.
If North keeps two hearts, we have to discard the spade Jack. Then again South gets squeezed in hearts and diamonds, but this time with the Q of hearts the threat.
I'm not sure how easy it is to tell what North has kept though.
Also, if North wins the first club and immediately returns a heart, instead of a diamond, the contract is still makeable - by playing the Ace and working on another squeeze. But this line fails immediately if North had the King of hearts after all, which seems to imply ducking a club is too dangerous compared with a line like nige1's..
#7
Posted 2018-February-23, 22:14
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#8
Posted 2018-February-24, 02:49
MrAce, on 2018-February-23, 22:14, said:
I would have played the same line as you Timo, so we should have a game some time. In particular if South has to win the first club, and returns a diamond, you win with the ace and head for this ending, and you must avoid cashing any major suit winners.
#9
Posted 2018-February-24, 12:04
lamford, on 2018-February-24, 02:49, said:
I stared at this trying like crazy trying to figure out WHY this is effective. I can picture the end position and how reading the position can allow one to make no matter which opp holds which cards so from that aspect I understand why this LOP looks decent. I have to ask this though. Even though this lop allows one to make 6 (with a proper read of the end position) why is this not the exact end position that is achieved if one plays the clubs from the top? Assuming south wins the 3rd club and returns a diamond? No matter how hard I try I cannot see the benefit of ducking a club when a 22 break allows me to play for an overtrick.
#10
Posted 2018-February-24, 12:40
When clubs are 2-2 or RHO has the stiff J and not xx, RHO will be able to win and play a heart through. If we guess that RHO has 0-2 diamonds or ♦QJ, I have a double (or triple) squeeze, but otherwise I have a nasty guess between a heart hook / squeeze and I would feel pretty stupid going down when clubs were 2-2 and the heart hook was on all along.
Note that if dummy had the ♦9, a club duck is a lot more appealing because we would have extra chances for a guard squeeze when RHO had either diamond honor.
Another note is that we should drop the ♠J at T1. The spade J is not needed as a threat, and we might entice RHO to continue spades if he were to win a club.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#11
Posted 2018-February-24, 17:07
gszes, on 2018-February-24, 12:04, said:
If you play the clubs from the top, you cannot make it when South has the king of hearts. If you duck a club, you can always make it if you read the position. If North wins and plays a heart, you can finesse or rise and play the double squeeze. The latter is a bit better. If South wins a club then he has to play a diamond and you go for the criss-cross above and if you can read the ending you are gin. Ducking a club is necessary to avoid using the crucial king of diamonds in dummy.
#12
Posted 2018-February-24, 17:33
lamford, on 2018-February-24, 17:07, said:
But surely as I mentioned initially, this will happen too often to make it worthwhile? While you can still make the contract, you're down to a 50/50 shot at best on guessing the heart King immediately (less if you can't guarantee reading the squeeze position) if North has any club honor (singleton/doubleton/doesn't matter); compared with the original line which works if clubs are 2-2 OR the heart king is onside.
#13
Posted 2018-February-24, 20:49
#14
Posted 2018-February-26, 10:07
lamford, on 2018-February-24, 17:07, said:
I remember this now sigh i was ticked off at yet another problem with NT instead of playing in my longgggggggggggggggg minor suit. I was envisioning the same end position in 6c not NT sorry all for the confusion in 6n the dia k will be gone but not so in 6c where there is an easy spade ruff reentry to hand.
#15
Posted 2018-February-27, 00:34
Phil, on 2018-February-24, 12:40, said:
I don't think this is right at all. It is necessary to duck a club whenever they are not 2-2 and South has the king of hearts. In fact ducking a club makes the contract whenever it can be made - if and this is a big if - you read the position. Cashing the clubs from the top makes around 64% of the time, when the clubs are 2-2 or when the king of hearts is onside.