Play for the drop or finesse?
#1
Posted 2016-August-17, 01:00
Dummy holds; ♥ K,8,7,5
Declarer holds; ♥ A,J,10,6,2
West leads ♠K, having overcalled the suit once.
I took the view that, having overcalled ♠, West was slightly more likely to have shortage in ♥
So, I decided to play small to the ♥K first.
West played ♥9 on my ♥2. I won with the ♥K and played the ♥5, East playing small to both tricks.
Do you now play West for exactly ♥Q,9 and play for the drop, or do you finesse, playing East for ♥Q,4,3?
In other words, does the forced play of the ♥9 by West look like a singleton or not?
Thanks.
D.
#2
Posted 2016-August-17, 01:10
#3
Posted 2016-August-17, 01:56
helene_t, on 2016-August-17, 01:10, said:
Thanks for the reply.
Yes, I obviously thought too much about it and finessed, losing to ♥Q,9 doubleton.
Not 'playing with the room' (who were "Eight ever, nine never", simply playing for the drop) the loss of an overtrick cost me a duck at Pairs scoring. Everyone else was making 11 tricks.
D.
#4
Posted 2016-August-17, 03:19
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#5
Posted 2016-August-17, 09:52
Plenty of expert players would have done what you did too That is: Taken a view.
As you say "Eight Ever, Nine Never". But never say never.
And as 1eyedjack said: Ah well, next time you will be getting a top.
The only thing to add is that playing against the room, so to speak, is a good ploy if you feel that you are well behind at Pairs. I have won many a Pairs evening by swindling a few tops in the last 8 boards or so. Otherwise, steady as she goes applies, and playing with the room if you have felt your session has gone well.
#7
Posted 2016-August-17, 16:07
The only two holdings that are relevant are Q9 or 9 singleton. There's no difference between seeing the 9 or the 3; the 'forced play of the 3' is equally from 3 singleton or Q3. Nothing else is relevant.
#8
Posted 2016-August-17, 16:12
https://sites.google...monty-hall-trap
(below solution 3)
https://www.youtube....hungPlaysBridge
#9
Posted 2016-August-17, 18:22
You say west overcalled but you didn't say how many spades your side has. This makes a difference in trying to calculate odds whether your side has 1 spade or 6+ spades. This is a bridge calculator for determining exactly your question http://rpbridge.net/cgi-bin/xsb2.pl
#10
Posted 2016-August-18, 00:46
On the play of the second ♥ from Dummy East follows, so I have now seen all three spot cards. Only the ♥Q is missing.
So, I think that this line from solution 1. here is key:
"That means you can counter the bias by pretending that East has only one extra unknown card instead of two. You cash the club king and lead toward the ace. East follows. Now he has zero extra unknown cards. So it's a toss-up. The finesse and the drop are equally likely to fail (or to succeed, for those of you with positive attitudes)."
In short, I think that it is indeed a "toss up" and that "eight ever, nine never" is as good a guide as any, despite the play of the nine on the first ♥.
Pity. I thought I was being more analytical.
D.
#11
Posted 2016-August-18, 01:49
Overcall in spades combined with lead of K from presumably some sequence doesn't have these biases. I think finesse is percentage.
#13
Posted 2016-August-18, 11:11
Stephen Tu, on 2016-August-18, 01:49, said:
Overcall in spades combined with lead of K from presumably some sequence doesn't have these biases. I think finesse is percentage.
Thanks!
https://www.youtube....hungPlaysBridge