The large number of players that allow a ruff-and-discard on BBO
#1
Posted 2019-July-12, 03:07
On BBO, there have been numerous times where I stretched to bid a doubled contract with obvious losers going for down 1, which somehow made because the defender allowed a ruff-and-discard. Most of the time it happened when the defenders won A-K in a suit and then decided to lead a Q into a void in dummy which had 3 trumps. Those who made the mistakes includes players who claim to be intermediate or even advanced. In fact are there situations that Im not aware of that the defender can actually benefit in a ruff-and-discard? Were those players that made the mistake simply taking calculated risk that failed?
#2
Posted 2019-July-12, 03:40
In the main you are absolutely right, it is usually awful bridge to help declarer along by allowing a ruff-and-discard. I wouldn't take much notice of the bridge level posted by some players. The other thing that contributes to this situation cropping up is poor carding (or not discussed carding between the two defenders).
The player on lead that allows a ruff-and-discard maybe thinks that declarer still has a card in his/her suit and partner has the void, whereas the reality is completely different.
#3
Posted 2019-July-12, 05:23
masterho, on 2019-July-12, 03:07, said:
Yes, there are situations where forcing a ruff-discard is best for the defense. Examples abound in defense books. Generally, if declarer is known to have no more losers in the remaining side suits, this is often best, it sometimes promotes a trump trick for the defense in some manner. Another situation is when there is only choice between ruff-sluff and breaking a side suit which will give up your only trick in the suit, while you have counted out that a single ruff-sluff will not be fatal, still letting you win that trick.
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Unlikely. More likely they are just bad defenders, or had a leading agreement mixup, or had a brain cramp. BBO average level of play is pretty low, and defense is the hardest part of the game to learn for most.
#4
Posted 2019-July-12, 05:48
masterho, on 2019-July-12, 03:07, said:
On BBO, you can assign yourself a world class ranking even if you just learned the basics of bridge 5 minutes ago. It's easier to get into a game as an intermediate, even easier as an advanced played, so a large percentage of players promote themselves to a better self-ranking. Basically, BBO self-rankings mean almost nothing.
When is a sluff-ruff OK?
Suppose a side suit is 4-4 and you have all the honors and spot cards except the queeen. A sluff-ruff doesn't really help you since you still have to guess where the queen is.
#5
Posted 2019-July-12, 08:44
Avoiding this requires good count signaling between the defenders. If you're playing with someone you don't know, you probably don't know whether they're giving count, or whether you can trust their signals. So you guess, and it's easy to guess wrong.
This almost certainly also goes on with pickup f2f partners. But you notice it more online because you probably play with more randoms there than f2f. Even when you pick up someone at the partnership desk in a f2f tournament, you're probably paired up more evenly.
#6
Posted 2019-July-12, 09:19
#9
Posted 2019-July-13, 00:52
nige1, on 2019-July-12, 09:45, said:
Surprizingly often, a ruff and a sluff is best defence. For example it can
-- fatally weaken declarer's trumps or
-- simply give nothing away when alternatives are risky
South is declarer in 6♠ on♦Q lead.
Declarer cashes ♠AK ♦AK ♣AK and exits in ♠s
If West now leads a ♥, then declarer can pick up the entire suit.
Although a minor exit gives declarer a ruff and a sluff,
declarer finds that a slow ♥ loser is inevitable.
Good example. I'm too lazy to write something up, but sometimes giving a ruff-sluff can cause declarer to lose control of the hand by causing communication problems, or possibly having to ruff with a trump that (eventually) creates a trump loser.
#10
Posted 2019-July-13, 04:35
#11
Posted 2019-July-14, 14:32
It's similar to the maxims "2nd hand low" and "3rd hand high". There are certainly many occasions where you should not follow these guidelines, but you should have a good reason for it.
#12
Posted 2019-July-14, 18:50
barmar 'I think saying that this is the best defense "surprisingly often" is an overbid. It's sometimes the best defense, but it's sufficiently infrequent that it's usually the subject of bridge columns aimed at advanced players. Most of the time a ruff-and-sluff helps declarer, and forcing defenders to do this is the basis of the well known strip and endplay technique. It's similar to the maxims "2nd hand low" and "3rd hand high". There are certainly many occasions where you should not follow these guidelines, but you should have a good reason for it.'
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Deals, where a ruff and sluff is best defence, sometimes go unrecognized at the table e.g.
West cashes ♥AKQ against South's 4♠.
To defeat the contract, West must lead a 4th ♥, giving declarer a useless ruff and sluff.
#13
Posted 2019-July-15, 07:49
#14
Posted 2019-July-15, 15:06
http://bridgewinners...ond-to-prayers/
#15
Posted 2019-July-15, 15:08
masterho, on 2019-July-12, 03:07, said:
nige1, on 2019-July-12, 09:45, said:
johnu, on 2019-July-13, 00:52, said:
the hog, on 2019-July-13, 04:35, said:
barmar, on 2019-July-14, 14:32, said:
nige1, on 2019-July-14, 18:50, said:
barmar, on 2019-July-15, 07:49, said:
#16
Posted 2019-July-15, 15:12
nige1, on 2019-July-15, 15:08, said:
Question: how do you think this compares to another "almost never" guideline, which is underleading an ace against a suit contract?
#17
Posted 2019-July-15, 15:27
#18
Posted 2019-July-17, 09:01
barmar, on 2019-July-15, 15:12, said:
I think giving a ruff-and-sluff is right way more often than underleading an ace. But of course the comparison is flawed- you can almost never be certain that underleading an ace is right, but you can be certain about the former. Whenever you know declarers shape there will be situations where you know it cannot cost a side suit trick - in which case it may set up a trump trick or avoid giving away a guess etc.
If you never notice that it is the right option maybe you aren't counting declarers shape all the time?
#19
Posted 2019-July-18, 03:42
#20
Posted 2019-July-18, 13:20
This deal from Andrew Robson's article in today's Times illustrates that even expert defenders have difficulty recognizing the need for a ruff and discard defence. In a Spring 4s match between this year's winners and last year's winners, South's declared 4♠. The opening lead was a ♣, which allowed declarer to set up his ♠s as trump surrogates, Later, over a meal, Joe Faucet spotted that 4 rounds of ♦s would have defeated the contract.
Surprizingly often, a ruff and a sluff is best defence. For example it can
-- fatally weaken declarer's trumps or
-- simply give nothing away when alternatives are risky
South is declarer in 6♠ on ♦Q lead.
Declarer cashes ♠AK ♦AK ♣AK and exits in ♠s
If West now leads a ♥, then declarer can pick up the entire suit.
Although a minor exit gives declarer a ruff and a sluff,
declarer finds that a slow ♥ loser is inevitable.