Opps play std carding if it matters, lead rushinow.
One way or another...
#2
Posted 2013-March-13, 09:43
I suppose I have little to lose by playing the ♦KA first. Once in a while the queen will drop which might tell me something. In the likely case that I learn nothing, I suppose I will try ♥J from dummy; if no cover or hitch, then ace and hook west.
-gwnn
#3
Posted 2013-March-13, 09:48
#4
Posted 2013-March-13, 10:00
Fluffy, on 2013-March-13, 09:48, said:
Depends on my LHO. I myself will sometimes play the 9 in such a situation, so I must at least consider it.
-gwnn
#5
Posted 2013-March-13, 10:47
#6
Posted 2013-March-13, 10:51
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2013-March-13, 11:43
#8
Posted 2013-March-13, 14:24
#9
Posted 2013-March-13, 14:42
clubs) its hard to imagine them bidding 6c w/o some type of shape
and the only thing left is short hearts. I finesse W for the Q.
#10
Posted 2013-March-13, 14:55
We could argue that the former is more consistent with the 6♣ call than the latter, but I don't buy it. East knew we were bidding slam no matter what, and that we were never going to stop off to double a slam when our combined trump holding rated to be x or xx opposite a void. He was trying to mess with us at almost no risk.
I happen to think that the second layout is more consistent with a 2♣ overcall than the first, so I'm going to play for 1=3 hearts. On a good day, West will have the grace to play his stiff Q and I can claim.
I am rejecting 5=7 clubs because the lead suggests AQ rather than AK, and AQJxx with a side red Queen or even xx Qx Q10xx AQJxx looks even less like a 2♣ overcall than my first two exemplars.
#11
Posted 2013-March-13, 15:49
mikeh, on 2013-March-13, 14:55, said:
We could argue that the former is more consistent with the 6♣ call than the latter, but I don't buy it. East knew we were bidding slam no matter what, and that we were never going to stop off to double a slam when our combined trump holding rated to be x or xx opposite a void. He was trying to mess with us at almost no risk.
I happen to think that the second layout is more consistent with a 2♣ overcall than the first, so I'm going to play for 1=3 hearts. On a good day, West will have the grace to play his stiff Q and I can claim.
I am rejecting 5=7 clubs because the lead suggests AQ rather than AK, and AQJxx with a side red Queen or even xx Qx Q10xx AQJxx looks even less like a 2♣ overcall than my first two exemplars.
Mike we had the stiff ♣ Q.
I would play W to hold the ♥Q at the table, but i can easily construct hands where East holds it. I am with Csaba on this one. After all West just overcalled 2♣ but East is the one who saved at 6 level. In long run i expect East to hold a singleton most of the time and we know he ain't short in spades or diamonds.
Without the ♥Q West would be something like xx xx Qxx AJTxxx or xx x Qxxx AJTxxx. First one is not everyone's taste of 2♣ and second one may have overcalled 3♣. His pd is not coming from pass. But you never know, people have different borderlines especially when it comes to overcalls.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#12
Posted 2013-March-13, 15:43
MrAce, on 2013-March-13, 15:49, said:
oh
It doesn't detract from my choice; I still think that 2=1=4=6 is slightly more likely than 2=3=2=6 and significantly more likely than a 5 card club suit, especially if we infer that rho holds the club K.
#13
Posted 2013-March-13, 15:43
#14
Posted 2013-March-13, 18:11
JLOGIC, on 2013-March-13, 11:43, said:
Is this based on the diamond echo or something else?
mikeh, on 2013-March-13, 14:55, said:
Why would LHO give true count holding the queen with the jack in dummy? I would have guessed that LHO holds either xx or Qxx. Isn't it semi-normal to falsecard when holding the honor?
#15
Posted 2013-March-13, 19:00
quiddity, on 2013-March-13, 18:11, said:
Why would LHO give true count holding the queen with the jack in dummy? I would have guessed that LHO holds either xx or Qxx. Isn't it semi-normal to falsecard when holding the honor?
Someone gave honest count: they have 6 diamonds, and one said odd and the other said even. Given that we cashed the A, knowing that LHO held 4 wasn't going to help us at all in that suit. Why assume that it is RHO who falsecarded? It all depends on the level: in the local club most players might forget to hi-lo with xx , but they'd think it close to cheating to hi-lo from Qxx and weird not to do so from Q10xx.
In addition it should NEVER become semi-normal to falsecard, except in the so-called mandatory false card situations and even then often the best strategy is to mix it up. It's like many players just beyond the beginner level holding QJ tight routinely 'falsecard' with the Q. Against one of them, and I've played quite a few, when they play the J instead, the restricted choice odds have essentially climbed to close to 100%.
Personally, my approach when defending slams against a competent declarer,where I trust partner to be a good defender and I cannot make a clear signal that cannot cost and may help, is that I almost always play my cards up the line. I just don't give any signal at all.
That does require a partner who can draw inferences, and there are times when one has to signal in order to help out partner. You may know that partner is possibly going to get pseudo-squeezed if you leave him in the dark about shape, or you may want to let partner know that you have one suit tied up and he can let it go, and so on. But especially when declarer's shape is known or readily inferred (as here), and declarer has a guess, just play cards up the line every time.
Falsecarding is engaging in poker. I'm a bad poker player. If you're good....if you read your opp more than he reads you, your best strategy may be different
Please note that I am speaking about slams and especially grands and that even so there are exceptions.
#16
Posted 2013-March-13, 19:44
mikeh, on 2013-March-13, 19:00, said:
I don't assume it is RHO who falsecarded - I assume whoever holds the queen falsecarded. I thought this was standard practice, the point being that defenders can signal count to each other without telling declarer if the suit is breaking 3-3 or 4-2.
#17
Posted 2013-March-14, 03:15
I'd just play the hand that bid at the six-level for a singleton. Maybe he planned this in the bidding, by bidding 6♣ with ♥Qx to talk me into going down, but most people aren't that clever.
#18
Posted 2013-March-14, 03:48
I play for the finesse too...
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#19
Posted 2013-March-14, 10:44
#20
Posted 2013-March-14, 11:47
WellSpyder, on 2013-March-14, 10:44, said:
But his reason was predicated on West having the ♣AQ.
And you can always play for the drop . This is another brilliant hand for the underrated Ghestem convention, since the absence of a WJO would cloud the issue nicely.