Play 3NT How do make a plan?
#1
Posted 2018-June-04, 15:29
#3
Posted 2018-June-05, 08:58
NickRW, on 2018-June-05, 02:28, said:
No, sorry, 3rd and 5th. Assume 5-3 club break. I also need to change the spades, as I meant this to be a novice/beginner's hand emphasizing strictly the heart suit.
#5
Posted 2018-June-05, 13:30
We have to guess who had Ax or hope of a 33-split ❤️. The ❤️9 complexifies too as we can finesse for the 10.
As we cant play twice towards KQ due to lack of entries (unlessEast duckswith Axx and he would fool many good players), and I understand W is longer in the suit he led so shorter in ❤️, we can try small to J andsmall both hands if J wins. That is specifically playing for this layout and no hanky-panky from E.
The finesse is theoretically 50% while 3-3 break is 36%. A bit less due the already known assymetry in a side suit.
Well...that is hard!
#6
Posted 2018-June-05, 19:52
apollo1201, on 2018-June-05, 13:30, said:
We have to guess who had Ax or hope of a 33-split ❤️. The ❤️9 complexifies too as we can finesse for the 10.
As we can’t play twice towards KQ due to lack of entries (unless’East ducks’with Axx and he would fool many good players), and I understand W is longer in the suit he led so shorter in ❤️, we can try small to J and’small both hands if J wins. That is specifically playing for this layout and no hanky-panky from E.
The finesse is theoretically 50% while 3-3 break is 36%. A bit less due the already known assymetry in a side suit.
Well...that is hard!
This is the heart of the matter - the finesse of the 9 is another way of playing the combination.
#7
Posted 2018-June-06, 02:08
#8
Posted 2018-June-06, 12:52
Stephen Tu, on 2018-June-06, 02:08, said:
Stephen - there is the additional factor of the hand shapes mirroring. I know. Factor in single 10 and doubleton 10 and low to the Jack and low back gives the best chance of 3 heart tricks. But try to construct a novice//beginner hand sometime. I was looking for baby steps first. (Did you happen to notice the 9? How does that change the chances?)
Btw, your point is excellent and goes along with the point of the lesson, i.e., to get beginners into the habit of looking more deeply into positions that may look routine. Thank you for your input.
#9
Posted 2018-June-06, 14:22
apollo1201, on 2018-June-05, 13:30, said:
OP made North the declarer instead of the traditional South, so East was the opening leader, not West. East is more likely to have led from 5 clubs on this auction and if so, West is more likely to have longer hearts.
#11
Posted 2018-June-07, 03:31
Stephen Tu, on 2018-June-06, 02:08, said:
For those interested in doing their own calculations, use Richard Pavlicek's Suit Break Calculator,
http://rpbridge.net/cgi-bin/xsb2.pl
e.g.
Set vacant spaces for West to 10 (assuming West has 3 clubs), and East to 8 (assuming East led from 5 clubs)
Set missing cards to 6 for the unknown 6 hearts
Press Calculate
You should get these results.
West 10 spaces Missing 6 Cards East 8 spaces West East Ways SpecificGeneric Group 3 3 20 1.81 36.20 36.20 4 2 15 2.11 31.67 48.64 2 4 15 1.13 16.97 5 1 6 1.81 10.86 13.88 1 5 6 0.50 3.02 6 0 1 1.13 1.13 1.28 0 6 1 0.15 0.15 21 21 64 8.65 100.00 100.00
Playing for 3-3 hearts or the 10 to drop, the odds are calculated as
3-3 break - 36.2%
4-2 break - 1/3 of 31.67% have a doubleton 10
2-4 break - 1/3 of 16.97% have a doubleton 10
5-1 break - 1/6 of 10.86% have a singleton 10
1-5 break - 1/6 of 3.02% have a singleton 10
1-5 break - 1/6 of 3.02% have a singleton A (if you lead low to J, the ace will pop up and you have 3 heart tricks)
6-0 break - 100% of 1.13% (if you lead a high heart, East will show out and you can take a heart finesse)
Only 1 of the last 2 cases can be handled. If you start with a high heart from hand, you can pick up the 6-0 break, but the 1-5 break with singleton ace will lose to the ace, and you only have 2 heart tricks. If you start with a low heart from hand, you can pick up a singleton ace with West, but won't know to take a 1st round finesse against the 10.
The 1-5 break with singleton ace happens .5% (=1/6 * 3.02%) when is less than the 1.13% chance of a 6-0 break, so playing a high heart from hand is better.
Add up the percentages for all the possible breaks to get a total success percentage.
For the line depending on a finesse for ♥10, do similar calculations for each of the distributions assuming you are going to finesse West.
#12
Posted 2018-June-11, 06:11
2. Seems more likely West led from 5 instead of 3.
3. Finessing is only necessary when west has h)Txxx. Tx is popping up. West might have overcalled with ATxxx and a spade card. Does not seem close.
4. Since we need diamonds 33 (probably), hooking gets even thinner, requiring wrst to be 1435. Yes, 3433 comes into play.
5. Maybe the key takeaway for n00bs is not ruining our entries and cashing diamonds first.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.