Beast from the east (3)
#21
Posted 2025-December-04, 17:34
Your partner appears to be the Master Masterminder
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#22
Posted 2025-December-04, 17:34
Your partner appears to be the Master Masterminder
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#24
Posted 2025-December-04, 20:24
Your partner appears to be the Master Masterminder
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#25
Posted Yesterday, 02:47
#26
Posted Yesterday, 04:19
AL78, on 2025-December-04, 13:09, said:
You need to play clubs, AK and a third ruffed by partner, a lead to one of your aces and a fourth club ruffed by partner.
Obvious 1♦ response.
#27
Posted Yesterday, 06:02
Cyberyeti, on 2025-December-05, 04:19, said:
Obvious 1♦ response.
That is exactly how the defence started. ♣AK, club ruff, heart to my ace, another club ruff, and the ♦A. That was our six tricks, after which declarer has the rest from spades and hearts. I don't know where a seventh defensive trick comes from, but Deep Finesse says EW cannot make 1♠.
#28
Posted Yesterday, 06:10
AL78, on 2025-December-05, 02:47, said:
- There's a 2♦ between 1♦ and 3♦. If you want to get shapely weak hands out of the way, why go to the 3-level immediately?
- If this is the true reasoning at the table, surely the obvious downgrade in the absence of a weak jump shift is 1♦, not 1NT.
- There are lots of ways to play weak jump shifts. Some people want a range of approximately 0-5. Personally I prefer the 4-8 range. Other people play it differently still. You(r partner) can't just throw a name of a convention out there and claim that it solves a problem.
If you go along with it both of you will get worse at the game, but maybe the partnership gets to feel better.
#29
Posted Yesterday, 07:14
AL78, on 2025-December-05, 06:02, said:
OK, you are never ever going to find the defence on your auction.
It requires an underlead at trick 2 (in clubs or diamonds).
Example:
A♣682
3♦JK4
Q♣397
N now plays a diamond and the play divides:
if E ruffs and plays a heart, you can win, play 2 more clubs, with partner discarding a heart, either overruffing to play a diamond, or discarding his second heart so the trump finesse can't be taken
If E discards a club, you win, cash a club partner discarding a heart, and play the fourth club, if declarer ruffs, you overruff promoting a trump to go with A♥, if he discards, partner discards another heart also ensuring 7 tricks
#30
Posted Yesterday, 07:53
DavidKok, on 2025-December-05, 06:10, said:
Given the low standard of the club I play at and given I have no regular partner, getting worse at the game is inevitable so I have to try and focus on the enjoyment of the social interaction and block out the occasional seemingly randomised results.

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