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Jettison

#1 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-14, 14:59


Yesterday, on Bridgez.com, there was a deal like this, which I've slightly embellished
7N by South on a lead


Similar theme.
7N by South on a lead.


Against South's 6N,
LHO leads K won by dummy's A while RHO follows with 9.
After this start, declarer can make on any subsequent defence.
How must declarer play?
What are the defenders' hands?


Hint
Spoiler


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#2 User is offline   gszes 

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Posted 2019-February-16, 17:27

someone has been having fun reading up on Commander Pawle's book of tricks:)))))
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#3 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-18, 19:54


Composed for Elena Jeronimidis BridgePlus magazine.
Andrew Robson republished it in the Times.
For completeness, here is the solution.
Please keep pressing Next for play and explanation.

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#4 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 02:25

Hi Nigel,

I am not sure that the diagram is quite working (or I am being stupid). Surely west can throw a diamond at trick 11 and east can exit in diamonds at trick 12?

Or have I missed something?
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#5 User is offline   661_Pete 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 03:44

Hello.

For the first board above, it goes like this.

South wins the opening lead with the A in dummy, dropping the K, then plays QJ, discarding AK from hand. Then play QJ10 from dummy, discarding AKQ. Then J109 from dummy.

Just before 9, West has this:
-
9
9
QJ10

Simple squeeze. If W throws a , N can cash two and two . If W throws a , South's four . If W throws a , N plays 2 to continue the squeeze.

I didn't cheat! I've figured it out for myself. Now if only I pull something like this off in actual play!
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#6 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 04:33

View PostTramticket, on 2019-February-19, 02:25, said:

I am not sure that the diagram is quite working (or I am being stupid). Surely west can throw a diamond at trick 11 and east can exit in diamonds at trick 12? Or have I missed something?

If East keeps x 8xx then declarer cashes 9 and exits with 7.
The losing squeezes West again. Dummy keeps the red suit that West abandons.
Hence, after winning 8, East is endplayed, because both dummy and declarer's hand are high.
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#7 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 05:16

[

A variant of the 2nd problem, composed for Bridge World, was something like this.
South to make 7NT on a lead.

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#8 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 06:08

View Postnige1, on 2019-February-19, 04:33, said:

If East keeps x 8xx then declarer cashes 9 and exits with 7.
The losing squeezes West again. Dummy keeps the red suit that West abandons.
Hence, when RHO wins 8, he is endplayed, because both dummy and declarer's hand are high.

You have reduced to:



In this trick 11 position, you are showing west discarding a heart and agree that both dummy and declarer's hands are high.

But on the 7, West can throw Q and East wins with the eight and exits in diamonds. West will take the last trick with the Q.
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#9 User is offline   661_Pete 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 06:42

View Postnige1, on 2019-February-19, 05:16, said:

[

A variant of the 2nd problem, composed for Bridge World, was something like this.
South to make 7NT on a lead.

I think the start is fairly straightforward. S overtakes the K with the A and cashes all the spades, throwing clubs plus A. Then K throwing a club. Five cards left:
North:
-
-
A
AK98
South:
-
Q6
K87
-

What happens when S plays the Q depends on what E has kept. Suppose he's abandoned the hearts and is left with:
-
-
QJ
QJ10

Then S throws another club and watches E's discard. If a diamond, S cashes 6 throwing A and cashes three diamonds. If E throws a club, S throws a club on 6 and dummy is high.

But if E has kept two hearts (no point in keeping one), he cannot have kept two diamonds and three clubs. S makes the same discard but on Q this time.
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#10 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 08:40

View PostTramticket, on 2019-February-19, 06:08, said:

You have reduced to:

In this trick 11 position, you are showing west discarding a heart and agree that both dummy and declarer's hands are high.
But on the 7, West can throw Q and East wins with the eight and exits in diamonds. West will take the last trick with the Q.

Sorry, Tramticket, you are quite right,
I made a mistake in the solution above,:(
(It's quite hard to ensure that every trick is correct,
especially when your sight is poor)
When declarer leads 7, dummy should comprise x and A9.
Now the claim thatt "West is squeezed again" becomes correct..
Dummy keeps the suit that West abandons :)
I've corrected my solution above to reflect your criticism
Thank you,

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#11 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 09:26

View Post661_Pete, on 2019-February-19, 06:42, said:

I think the start is fairly straightforward. S overtakes the K with the A and cashes all the spades, throwing clubs plus A. Then K throwing a club. Five cards left:
North:
-
-
A
AK98
South:
-
Q6
K87
-

What happens when S plays the Q depends on what E has kept. Suppose he's abandoned the hearts and is left with:
-
-
QJ
QJ10

Then S throws another club and watches E's discard. If a diamond, S cashes 6 throwing A and cashes three diamonds. If E throws a club, S throws a club on 6 and dummy is high.

But if E has kept two hearts (no point in keeping one), he cannot have kept two diamonds and three clubs. S makes the same discard but on Q this time.

661_Pete has the correct idea and his ending is nearly right but
declarer must wait to jettison of a red ace
until after East has committed himself.
For example, In his suggested ending,
East can defeat the contract by keeping JT QJT

The solution is for declarer to delay the discard of the appropriate red ace,
until his last ,
As 661_Pete points out, If East abandons and
obstinately hangs onto his s, then,
on declarer's last , declarer jettisons dummy's A..
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#12 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2019-February-19, 10:14

View Postnige1, on 2019-February-19, 08:40, said:

Sorry, Tramticket, you are quite right,


Thank you. I see it now. (I was beginning to think that I was mad!)

Thank you for the trouble taken on this - it really is very elegant. :)
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#13 User is offline   661_Pete 

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Posted 2019-February-20, 03:27

View Postnige1, on 2019-February-19, 09:26, said:

661_Pete has the correct idea and his ending is nearly right but
declarer must wait to jettison of a red ace
until after East has committed himself.
For example, In his suggested ending,
East can defeat the contract by keeping JT QJT

The solution is for declarer to delay the discard of the appropriate red ace,
until his last ,
As 661_Pete points out, If East abandons and
obstinately hangs onto his s, then,
on declarer's last , declarer jettisons dummy's A..
Thanks. I was already thinking, after I'd posted above, that I hadn't quite covered every eventuality. And I don't claim any skills at DD problem-solving!

Certainly a very difficult and complex squeeze! Surely even a world-class player would have a hard time bringing that off in actual play! (though I suppose the Hideous Hog might...)
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#14 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2019-February-20, 11:08

View Post661_Pete, on 2019-February-20, 03:27, said:

Surely even a world-class player would have a hard time bringing that off in actual play! (though I suppose the Hideous Hog might...)

IMO...
  • A good player would solve the 1st problem, in ordinary play, at the table.
  • A player would solve the 2nd problem, only at double-dummy. At the table, one would play for a 2-1 break.
  • A good player might solve the 3rd problem, single-dummy, but it's hard and would take one some time.

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