Suit combo Probably it was talked about before
#2
Posted 2008-February-24, 20:34
- hrothgar
#3 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-24, 20:35
#5
Posted 2008-February-25, 04:24
Oct 2006: Mission impossible
Soon: Mission illegal
#6
Posted 2008-February-25, 04:35
Small to the seven loses to East's K54, K5 and K4. That's roughly:
1/8 x 50 + 2/6 x 41 = 20
Running the queen loses to East's KJ4, KJ5, KJ and KJ54, which is:
2/8 x 50 + 1/6 x 41 + 1/2 x 10 = 24
Ace and another loses to East's 5, 4, KJ54 and void, which is:
2/8 x 50 + 2/2 x 10 = 22.5
So, it wouldn't take much to make me play one of the other lines.
#7
Posted 2008-February-25, 06:36
#8 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-25, 06:57
gnasher, on Feb 25 2008, 05:35 AM, said:
Small to the seven loses to East's K54, K5 and K4. That's roughly:
1/8 x 50 + 2/6 x 41 = 20
Running the queen loses to East's KJ4, KJ5, KJ and KJ54, which is:
2/8 x 50 + 1/6 x 41 + 1/2 x 10 = 24
Ace and another loses to East's 5, 4, KJ54 and void, which is:
2/8 x 50 + 2/2 x 10 = 22.5
So, it wouldn't take much to make me play one of the other lines.
Hehe right everyone thinks ace and another is right, even among the very top players few people know this one.
It applies only with a 6-3 fit and the queen being third otherwise ace and another can pick up one 4-0 split and becomes the favorite.
Of course as others have mentioned from a non-technical point of view since people pop from Kx at least some percentage of the time leading small rather than the ace is often right, even with a 5-4 fit (when it is the wrong play against perfect defense).
#9
Posted 2008-February-25, 07:55
Jlall, on Feb 25 2008, 01:57 PM, said:
And only when you have good enough spots. You need at least A109732 opposite Q54 or A105432 opposite Q96.
#10
Posted 2008-February-25, 08:10
gnasher, on Feb 25 2008, 04:35 AM, said:
Small to the seven loses to East's K54, K5 and K4. That's roughly:
1/8 x 50 + 2/6 x 41 = 20
Not quite I think - after the 7 loses to the Jack, you should cash the ace. So it only loses to K54, 5 and 4.
#11
Posted 2008-February-25, 08:45
cherdano, on Feb 25 2008, 09:10 AM, said:
gnasher, on Feb 25 2008, 04:35 AM, said:
Small to the seven loses to East's K54, K5 and K4. That's roughly:
1/8 x 50 + 2/6 x 41 = 20
Not quite I think - after the 7 loses to the Jack, you should cash the ace. So it only loses to K54, 5 and 4.
You are right.
But, in practice, RHO will pop King some of the time when he holds Kx. He doesn't have to do this often to make the second round finesse the better line.
Right?
#12
Posted 2008-February-25, 08:45
cherdano, on Feb 25 2008, 03:10 PM, said:
gnasher, on Feb 25 2008, 04:35 AM, said:
1/8 x 50 + 2/6 x 41 = 20
Not quite I think - after the 7 loses to the Jack, you should cash the ace. So it only loses to K54, 5 and 4.
That's true. I made the same mistake when considering running the queen. After it loses, you should play for the drop, losing to K but gaining against KJ.
Most of this seems quite counterintuitive to me. Just goes to show that, in my case at least, intuition is no substitute for analysis.

Help
