I wasn't sure how to play this suit. Naturally my line was not the winning one:
J98 opposite Kxxx in a NT contract with enough entries to play it however you like.
What's the best line to make two tricks in the suit? Does it change things if you can't afford to lose two tricks both to LHO in the process?
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Unfamiliar suit combination
#2
Posted 2011-October-28, 04:09
Jinksy, on 2011-October-28, 03:54, said:
I wasn't sure how to play this suit. Naturally my line was not the winning one:
J98 opposite Kxxx in a NT contract with enough entries to play it however you like.
What's the best line to make two tricks in the suit? Does it change things if you can't afford to lose two tricks both to LHO in the process?
J98 opposite Kxxx in a NT contract with enough entries to play it however you like.
What's the best line to make two tricks in the suit? Does it change things if you can't afford to lose two tricks both to LHO in the process?
small to the 9, then small to the J.
It's hand to say, since we don't know which hand is declarer and which is dummy.
Bridge Personality: 44 44 43 34
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#3
Posted 2011-October-28, 05:02
BunnyGo, on 2011-October-28, 04:09, said:
small to the 9, then small to the J.
It's hand to say, since we don't know which hand is declarer and which is dummy.
It's hand to say, since we don't know which hand is declarer and which is dummy.
If small to the 9 wins (I.e. no TD appears), play small to the 8 next,
If it loses you should run the J on the way back to finesse against the Q. If you play low to the J after the ten has won you are zero play for 2 tricks.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper
#4
Posted 2011-October-28, 05:04
phil_20686, on 2011-October-28, 05:02, said:
If small to the 9 wins (I.e. no TD appears), play small to the 8 next,
If it loses you should run the J on the way back to finesse against the Q. If you play low to the J after the ten has won you are zero play for 2 tricks.
If it loses you should run the J on the way back to finesse against the Q. If you play low to the J after the ten has won you are zero play for 2 tricks.
Yes, thank you for correcting that.
Bridge Personality: 44 44 43 34
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#5
Posted 2011-October-28, 07:17
Who is LHO? You didn't say which hand you hold
I would probably lead twice to J98 finessing the T.
I would probably lead twice to J98 finessing the T.
"It may be rude to leave to go to the bathroom, but it's downright stupid to sit there and piss yourself" - blackshoe
#6
Posted 2011-October-28, 07:29
usually "xyz opp tuv" means xyz=dummy, but I'm not sure how reliable this inference is.
Anyway I guess if you can't afford to lose two tricks to one of the two opponents (the dangerous opponent, TDO), you can play TDO to have the 10 (run the 9 or low to 9)?
Anyway I guess if you can't afford to lose two tricks to one of the two opponents (the dangerous opponent, TDO), you can play TDO to have the 10 (run the 9 or low to 9)?
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
George Carlin
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2011-October-29, 02:02
J98 was dummy, sorry.
The "4♥ is a transfer to 4♠" award goes to Jinksy - PhilKing
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