Matchpoints. Your lead?
Pick an opening lead?
#2
Posted 2017-June-03, 23:25
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted 2017-June-04, 00:37
You know that trumps ♥s are breaking favourably but partner may have Qx, and declarer may have a two-way finesse available to him. The last thing you want to do is make it easy for him to pick up your partner's Q by leading a trump.
Your ♦ holding is under dummy's. It could confuse declarer by leading a small♦ but it could also present him with a vital tempo to establish dummy's ♦ for discards of losers.
It is generally bad practice to lead or lead away from an unsupported ace against a suit contract [awm's comment noted], so leading the ♣ ace immediately relinquishes your control of that suit.
As for a small ♠. The consensus about this lead is that you are trying to set up a winner in the suit, while you still have a control in your hand ♣A. The odds are that you will find partner with either the A, K or J and that it will be a safe lead.
At matchpoints it is usually best to do what everyone else is doing in the room. Only when you are desperate for a top do you go against the flow of what is the norm. If 4♥ is making whatever the lead, and some declarers, let's say by guessing the ♥ finesse can make +450 instead of +420, the last thing you want to do by making an unconventional lead is to present a declarer with +480 (two overtricks) and an absolute top.
#4
Posted 2017-June-04, 14:02
I couldn't see this as being good advice but I thought I might be out of touch with modern reality, so I posted the hand to see what others thought.
At the time I posted this, there were 10 votes for my favored low spade lead and none for anything else. I find TheBadger's analysis excellent.
#5
Posted 2017-June-04, 21:01
Kaitlyn S, on 2017-June-04, 14:02, said:
I couldn't see this as being good advice but I thought I might be out of touch with modern reality, so I posted the hand to see what others thought.
At the time I posted this, there were 10 votes for my favored low spade lead and none for anything else. I find TheBadger's analysis excellent.
I considered the club Ace for the reasons mentioned but rejected it because A), there is no way to know if the diamond suit is 5+ cards and B) there is no way to know that the cashing tricks are in spades, not clubs.
I get the aggressive lead part, and if the auction would have been 1H-1S-2S-4S, and the Kxx of hearts, then the club Ace makes more sense.
#6
Posted 2017-June-04, 22:00
At the time I posted this, there were 10 votes for my favored low spade lead and none for anything else. I find TheBadger's analysis excellent.
[/quote]
Thank you Kaitlyn. I have looked at the hand again. I still believe a small ♠ is the right lead. To find partner with ♣KQJ and cashable tricks is more luck than judgement, I feel.
#7
Posted 2017-June-05, 07:35
Kaitlyn S, on 2017-June-03, 22:24, said:
Matchpoints. Your lead?
I dislike leading away from unsupported honors when defending suit contracts so it has to be a trump lead. If partner does
have a trump honor its dead in the water anyway plus the trump lead will cut down dummy's ruffing
power.
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#8
Posted 2017-June-05, 10:00
Kaitlyn S, on 2017-June-04, 14:02, said:
I wish I had seen this before the weekend since the author obviously knows things the rest of us don't! I was on lead yesterday against 4♠ with a similar choice between an unsupported A or QJxx in different side suits. I thought my choice of the Q might have worked out well when dummy went down with Kx. But no, declarer had the A, while partner had KQJ in the suit in which I had the unsupported A, and declarer was able to discard a loser in this suit.
Perhaps I should be relieved that no-one else seemed to have read the book either, since the board was close to average in a largish field (100 pairs) in a national final. Or perhaps the A really is the wrong lead unless you have seen the full hand.....
#9
Posted 2017-June-05, 10:50
Kaitlyn S, on 2017-June-03, 22:24, said:
Matchpoints. Your lead?
At matchpoints, there is no question that a small spade is the suggested lead. It may not set the contract, but is most unlikely to give any anything.
At IMPs, I might lead the Ace clubs, but I doubt it. To say that the Ace clubs is the recommended lead because partner happens to have the KQJ clubs is result playing, and is in my opinion, not good bridge.
#10
Posted 2017-June-05, 15:58
* The opponents didn't investigate slam and you have 9HCP, so partner has a card or two. If your side doesn't have a red trick, then he is likely to have a spade card.
* LHO hasn't necessarily shown long, strong diamonds. Your KTx isn't that bad (a lot better than Qxx). Only if dummy shows up with AQJxx is your holding awful.
* Opening leads are tough and often a guess. Whereas expert players will rarely make defensive errors later in the play, they will often select what turns out to be the wrong opening lead. At MPs, why swing boards on the opening lead if you think you and partner are a lot better than average? Unless you have some distinct reason for making an anti-field lead, just lead what everyone else will lead and score points by defending the hand better later on, when the decisions involve far less guesswork.
Cheers,
Mike
#11
Posted 2017-June-06, 03:35
Winstonm, on 2017-June-04, 21:01, said:
When the opponents are playing a strong 1NT opening (as most opponents do) then opener has pretty promised an unbalanced hand when he jumped to 3♥. Of course, it is possible that he has a 4441 distribution, but I consider it safe to assume that opener has 5(+) diamonds.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#12
Posted 2017-June-06, 06:58
#13
Posted 2017-June-06, 09:45
Nabooba, on 2017-June-06, 06:58, said:
#15
Posted 2017-June-06, 20:02
I voted trump. I'll concede I'm wrong, but I don't think the difference is that big, and the situation I outlined might be enough to make a difference.
#16
Posted 2017-June-07, 02:43
The_Badger, on 2017-June-04, 00:37, said:
While I can agree with the rest, this is nonsense.
And it does not get better because this nonsense gets repeated time and again
Play, bid and lead what the average player does and you end with an average result.
This does not mean I go out of my way doing things differently. I also lead a low spade here.
However, the argument is not because I try to mimic what others will do.
I simply expect this lead to be more often effective than other leads, particularly at matchpoints.
Rainer Herrmann
#17
Posted 2017-June-07, 02:54
akwoo, on 2017-June-06, 20:02, said:
http://www.rpbridge.net/4k00.htm
Look at example 10 to 13 (Finesse Against Dummy) and you or your partner may learn something
Rainer Herrmann
#18
Posted 2017-June-07, 09:04
rhm, on 2017-June-07, 02:43, said:
And it does not get better because this nonsense gets repeated time and again
Play, bid and lead what the average player does and you end with an average result.
This does not mean I go out of my way doing things differently. I also lead a low spade here.
However, the argument is not because I try to mimic what others will do.
I simply expect this lead to be more often effective than other leads, particularly at matchpoints.
Rainer Herrmann
We agree.
#19
Posted 2017-June-07, 14:46
akwoo, on 2017-June-06, 20:02, said:
If S-Jx or S-Jxx is on the board, why wouldn't you play the SA if you have it?
rhm, on 2017-June-07, 02:54, said:
Look at example 10 to 13 (Finesse Against Dummy) and you or your partner may learn something
Rainer Herrmann
RP's example where you don't play the ace has the queen on the table. With the jack on the table, I think the play of the ace is indicated. After all, the diamonds are still dangerous (and if third hand is looking at D-AQJxx on the board and three small in his hand, he might hop SA even if the SQ is in dummy at matchpoints.)
akwoo, on 2017-June-06, 20:02, said:
#20
Posted 2017-June-08, 16:00