Put off the finesse until the last possible moment By Easley Blackwood

Ellensburg Daily Record – 10 Ene 1956

When you have some kind of a finesse to take to make your contract, put off the finesse until the last possible moment. In the meantime, try to get an accurate count on the opponents’ hands. In a surprisingly large number of cases this practice will guide you into the only winning line of play.

2 strong

In today’s deal Mr. Champion opened the jack of spades against the heart slam. Miss Brash won with the ace and took three rounds of trumps, noting that Mr. Champion discarded the deuce and four of diamonds on the last two rounds.

Now the lazy and careless way to play the hand from this point would be to lead the six of diamonds to dummy’s ace with the intention of returning a diamond and finessing. If the diamonds finesse lost, the defenders would cash a spade for a one trick set. That would just be bad luck.

Bad Play

Actually, it would be more than bad luck. It would also be very bad play. There was no reason at all to take a diamond finesse toward Mr. Champion as early as the sixth trick. Miss Brash was not satisfied to play it that way and determination to get as good a count as possible on every hand explains why she bring home a lot of her super-optimistic contracts. There didn’t appear to be any play other than the diamond f-nesse, but there was no harm in looking for one.

So she cashed three clubs noting that the suit broke 4-3. Now she led a spade and Mr. Abel won with the queen.

Best Return

With nothing but spades and the 10 of diamonds, Mr. Abel made his best return, the king of spades. Miss Brash ruffed and when Mr. Champion failed to follow suit, discarding 10 of clubs, the opposing distribution was crystal-clear. Mr. Abel had started with six spades and he had shown exactly three clubs and three hearts, he could have only one diamond and if that one diamond were the queen or the 10, the contract was home.

Miss Brash therefore knew that her only hope was the “unnatural” play of the king of diamonds first. When the 10 dropped on her right, she led the six and took the marked finesse of dummy’s nine.

MAS DEL MISMO AUTOR

Improve Your Play #1 with Larry Matheny

Many contracts are won or lost simply because the players did not listen to or remember the auction

Tromso 2015: The Inaugural Board

The only lead that defeats the slam is a club: declarer has to play the...

The Plan XXXVII by Tim Bourke

After this rather agricultural auction, West led the jack of hearts and dummy’s queen held the first trick.

Buenos Aires 2015; Open Teams: Brazil-Argentina

Brazil met Argentina in the third match of the day. At one of the tables for Argentina played: Pellegrini-Lucena, and for Brazil: Chagas - Villas Boas, at the other table Camberos-Muzzio (Arg) vs Brenner-Branco (BRZ).

Slava Cup 2015: Moscow, February 20 to 22

The Slava Cup 2015 will be held on February 20 - 22, 2015 in the Danilovskaya Hotel. Photo: last year winners: Berend van de Bos, Sebastiaan Drijver, Herman Drekelford, Sjoert Brink & Jiris van Lankveld.

Franck Riehm elected as WBF President

The World Bridge Federation is pleased to announce the...

1st South American Online Mixed Teams Championship

All players belonging to any NBO affiliated to the WBF are welcome!

I Brazilian Online Bridge Festival 2020

Some of the best players in the world are Brazilians, and some of the most enthusiastic players too! Our Brazilian Online Festival has appeal to players of all levels. Your team will play in a friendly but competitive atmosphere, with very well-organized scoring and experienced Directors to ensure a pleasant experience for all.

WBF Robot Tournaments

Come and join the competition through our Providers, BBO, Funbridge and Ourgame, all offering you this great opportunity – we look forward to some challenging tournaments!”

The Endplay

An endplay (also throw-in), in bridge, is a tactical play where a defender is put on lead at a strategic moment, and then has to make a play that loses one or more tricks.

The Scissors Coup by John Brown

Scissors coup (or, Scissor coup, ) is a type of coup in bridge, so named because it cuts communications between defenders.

World Bridge Federation – Youth

The Championship is open to all players born on or after 1st January 1992 (Juniors & Girls) or born on or after 1st January 1997 (Youngsters) or born on or after 1st January 2002 (Kids) in good standing with their own NBOs.

Prevent a Ruff by Jon Brown

West led his singleton club, which dummy's king won. South read the lead as a singleton.

RELACIONADOS

CATEGORIAS POPULARES