expert defense
#1
Posted 2020-September-01, 05:02
P leads ♥2 (you play length signals throughout, so low from odd) and you see this dummy and your hand:
♠AQ
♥xx
♦x
♣AT98xxxx
♠J32
♥J9
♦AKT987
♣64
dummy plays low and you the ♥J which declarer wins with the Q. now decl plays the♣J which p covers with the Q and dummy wins the A.
Whats your plan?
#2
Posted 2020-September-01, 10:17
#3
Posted 2020-September-01, 15:43
I doubt this trick will be the determining factor in how many tricks will be made unless low-high can mean something other than odd number of clubs.
#4
Posted 2020-September-01, 16:40
++++++++++++++++++++
(Reverse) Smith Peters can be useful in this kind of context. e.g. You might play ♣6, if you've agreed that a peter shows dislike of partner's lead and asks for a switch. After cashing ♦AK, you can switch back to ♥.
#5
Posted 2020-September-01, 23:59
manudude03, on 2020-September-01, 15:43, said:
I doubt this trick will be the determining factor in how many tricks will be made unless low-high can mean something other than odd number of clubs.
p surely has the c K. in fact partner was waiting for a clue. declarer´s hand is totally unknown, it can be a monster or maybe below average. his 3nt call tells very little. so it may well be that he has to cash the h A before it gets lost. oviously a count signal is useless since p will know the exact c count on the next trick, there simply are no more c out. playing the low card shows interest in the lower suit, so p can switch to d with very good results. a high c would normally show s but here it simply shows no d interest.
#6
Posted 2020-September-02, 06:52
By doing the opposite to what is usual is signifying something. A partnership that is consistent with their signals and defensive discards should be able to work out what's going on here, in my humble opinion.
#7
Posted 2020-September-02, 08:01
And a presumably expert partner bid 3N with, one assumes, the stiff club Jack, at most KJ in spades and QJ in diamonds? Declarer may be as bad a player as his partner is, but even really weak players would usually not play the heart Queen if holding AKQ, so it looks as if declarer has something like a KJxx AQxx QJxx J at best. Bidding 3N is weird unless, of course, a 3C preempt promises 8 winners😊
And our partner’s lead was uninformative about his interest in hearts?
The question of what to play has a little interest, but the context is simply silly.
It’s pretty obvious that declarer is going to play a club after winning the Ace, and that partner will be on lead.
Partner knows the heart situation, and he knows that dummy has a spadeventry. He should infer that declarer almost surely has the spade King for his 3N.
Therefore partner should know that a spade is futile, so should play a diamond in any event. However, we can encourage him to do so, assuming that he pays attention to our carding. Fortunately, we have a simple binary message: lead spades or diamonds. Play up the line, to show you want the lower of the two alternatives.
However, partner would have to be very bad not to play a diamond anyway.
#8
Posted 2020-September-02, 08:55
luckyloser, on 2020-September-01, 23:59, said:
More or less matches up with what I'm saying (I didn't bother mentioning partner had the ♣K- obviously the case), except West should already know you're doubleton before you even play one (if declarer has a doubleton club, then playing the ace seems strange). I was answering under the assumption you weren't playing Smith Peters or Smith Echos.
#10
Posted 2020-September-05, 10:00
#11
Posted 2020-September-05, 12:14
msjennifer, on 2020-September-05, 10:00, said:
Mikeh says playing up the line in clubs says you want a diamond switch. Apparently you are saying that playing up the line in clubs shows ♥Q, assuming declarer won the king.
If declarer actually had their bid, they should have something more like
East would have a different hand, but still the same club holding.
and you should be signalling partner to cash out (this is MP) because you have nothing. I don't have any answers, but there are a lot of potential legal signals that could be sent, so which one applies?
#13
Posted 2020-September-06, 15:38
johnu, on 2020-September-05, 12:14, said:
If declarer actually had their bid, they should have something more like
East would have a different hand, but still the same club holding.
and you should be signalling partner to cash out (this is MP) because you have nothing. I don't have any answers, but there are a lot of potential legal signals that could be sent, so which one applies?
Also, as Nige1 pointed out, there is Smith and Reverse Smith Echos. IIRC, there was a poster who always had the perfect convention or card signal that solved the current particular problem.
T2, Declarer leads ♣J,Q,A.