Third and Fifth Opening Leads against Suit Contracts
#1
Posted 2011-June-23, 08:43
#2
Posted 2011-June-23, 09:00
1) 3rd & 5th: Lead your 5th card in a suit if there is one. If not, lead your 3rd card in a suit if there is one. If not, lead your 1st card in the suit (i.e. high from a doubleton).
2) 3rd & low: Lead your 3rd card in a suit if you have an even number (bigger than 2) and your lowest card in the suit if you have an odd number.
They're similar (only differ
#3
Posted 2011-June-23, 16:02
The disadvantage is that if the third spot card is relatively high, on certain suit layouts you can lose a later round trick that could have been avoided by leading low.
Because of this, many play 3rd/low vs. suits, but not vs. notrump. Knowing count immediately is often more important vs. suits (need to know how many tricks can cash before declarer ruffs, whether a shift might be better, can count out declarer's hand sooner), and the spot card wasted leading to a 3rd/4th round lost trick matters less often since by then often somebody is ruffing.
#4
Posted 2011-June-23, 16:46
semeai, on 2011-June-23, 09:00, said:
1) 3rd & 5th: Lead your 5th card in a suit if there is one. If not, lead your 3rd card in a suit if there is one. If not, lead your 1st card in the suit (i.e. high from a doubleton).
2) 3rd & low: Lead your 3rd card in a suit if you have an even number (bigger than 2) and your lowest card in the suit if you have an odd number.
They're similar (only differ on 7+ card suits). Basically, playing high-low in the suit as leader shows an even number and playing low-high shows an odd number. This fits with how doubletons are played, and thus makes more sense from a count perspective than standard, which either has to lead low from 3, confusing it with 4, or middle from 3, confusing it with a doubleton.
They're different on 6 card suits, too. (with your first you lead 5th best, with the second you lead 3rd best).
#5
Posted 2011-June-23, 20:26
lilboyman, on 2011-June-23, 08:43, said:
As they explained it gives u better picture about the count.
For example if you played 4th best leads, you would lead the same card from both of those holdings
K72
KT72
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#6
Posted 2011-June-24, 01:53
Leading 4th highest (or 2nd) will require a lot of deviations when you have only a 3 card suit, and also, as a result partner can no longer count the hand with rule of 11 (see MrAce's example). So while 3/5 leads work similar to 2/4 leads, they avoid deviations from the agreement. Also I find that it's usually much easier to read the position when your partner leads his 3rd highest.
You also asked what to do with 5+ card suits. There are several ways to play it as mentioned by others. I'd suggest to experiment with the different approaches to find out what you prefer best.
#7
Posted 2011-June-24, 07:31
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#8
Posted 2011-June-25, 05:40
I can see that it's not ideal that partner doesn't know if you've led the 2 from K-7-2 or K-10-7-2. But does it not also create similar problems for partner if you'd lead the 6 from both K-8-6-4 and 9-8-6-4?
#9
Posted 2011-June-25, 08:53
#10
Posted 2011-June-25, 10:47
1H-(1S)-2H-(2S)
All pass
If you lead a heart, count is usually less important than attitude.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#11
Posted 2011-June-25, 12:39
BunnyGo, on 2011-June-25, 10:47, said:
1H-(1S)-2H-(2S)
All pass
If you lead a heart, count is usually less important than attitude.
And in that case, many people have the agreement that you lead 3rd from an honor, and top of a bad suit (since you've supposedly already shown three).