Slawinski leads
#2
Posted 2012-May-17, 12:38
This post has been edited by chasetb: 2012-May-17, 13:02
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#3
Posted 2012-May-17, 12:39
Or maybe it's This?
Seriously, have people gotten THAT lazy where they won't do a simple search, like 'Slawinski leads + bridge'???
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#5
Posted 2012-May-17, 14:45
I will ask him about it or if he has any idea why they call their system "Slawinsky lead".
#6
Posted 2012-May-17, 14:57
bluecalm, on 2012-May-17, 14:45, said:
I will ask him about it or if he has any idea why they call their system "Slawinsky lead".
Aren't the F-N leads mentioned in the Systems in Defence book as an interesting experiment? They certainly follow his idea of the mixed signal and just using it as a lead.
I always think F-N leads are the bridge equivalent of writing in the margin that you've solved Fermat's Last Theorem but there is no space for the proof. Probably just me.
#7
Posted 2012-May-17, 15:00
paulg, on 2012-May-17, 14:57, said:
I always think F-N leads are the bridge equivalent of writing in the margin that you've solved Fermat's Last Theorem but there is no space for the proof. Probably just me.
You aren't alone in that thought .
BTW, don't they lead second best from KXXX as well? As I recall, the note in the margin called for 3rd and 5th from HXX(XX) and top / second from odd sequence without H..
#8
Posted 2012-May-17, 15:13
#10
Posted 2012-May-17, 16:06
bluecalm, on 2012-May-17, 15:13, said:
Looking at leads in the middle of the hand, some pairs lead differently when they break a new suit through declarer. Just to complicate matters
#11
Posted 2012-May-18, 03:01
- hrothgar
#12
Posted 2012-May-18, 07:00
***
Ignore the top honor. Lead as your spot length agreement.
Eg. K742 leads 2 as from 742 - 3-spots;
K74 leads 7 as if 74 doubleton spots.
#13
Posted 2012-May-18, 07:46
han, on 2012-May-18, 03:01, said:
2/4 = Polish leads?
We briefly played Slawinski [mixed] during the hand as well as on opening lead, the biggest problems with it would have been solved by playing attitude through declarer.
#14
Posted 2012-May-18, 10:13
dake50, on 2012-May-18, 07:00, said:
Eg. K742 leads 2 as from 742 - 3-spots;
K74 leads 7 as if 74 doubleton spots.
dake50 / hanp,
Is this part of the Polish 2/4th while leading through declarer? If so, it looks like the near-inverse of leading Slawinski (mixed) through declarer:
K742: Lead 2
742: Lead 7
K74: Lead 4
Mickyb said:
Can you elaborate a little more?