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Leading from a suit without an honor

#21 User is offline   Hanoi5 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 03:37

Adam, she's obviously from Israel.

 wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:

Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


 rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:

Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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#22 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 05:55

View PostElianna, on 2011-February-09, 17:07, said:

And so from, say, four small she thinks that you should lead the second highest.

This is standard in the UK. The second card played is not the smallest, but the original third highest.
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#23 User is offline   Elianna 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 08:55

View PostVampyr, on 2011-February-10, 05:55, said:

This is standard in the UK. The second card played is not the smallest, but the original third highest.


But if you see the 5 and then the 7, how do you know if partner started with Q75 or 754?

I agree that if you see the 4 and then the 5 one can't distinguish between Q54 and 754, but my partner is promoting her leads as a way to distinguish between these types of holdings.
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#24 User is offline   Elianna 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 08:59

View Postbarmar, on 2011-February-09, 18:12, said:

Lawrence also hates MUD. He says so over and over in his Opening Leads book.


Thank you very much for this comment. She claims to be a big follower of Lawrence (at least on bidding).

I don't really believe in appeals to authority as arguments, but she does, and as we disagree on authorities usually, this may be very useful.
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#25 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 09:57

There's no real standard. Just make sure you have an agreement you both feel comfortable* with and stick to it. If you get a poor result, blame the agreement.
*: if it's impossible to both feel comfortable, one of you has to be flexible to adjust to partner's agreement and hope to pick it up by playing this way. That's how I turned most of my UDCA partners, by just trying it out. If it doesn't work out, change, otherwise be glad you admitted on playing her crazy system ;)

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#26 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 10:31

My partner and I circle 2nd and 4th on the convention card.
From 3 small we circle all 3 with an arrow to "another suit". Low if partner bid it and it's unsupported.

It happens so rarely, you can falsecard a doubleton against a suit, lead attitude ie. low from a yarb that doesn't want a switch (so you only blow one suit) high from a hand that does... whatever you want.

Put me down for a new partner before you disagree on something relevant.
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#27 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 12:07

View PostElianna, on 2011-February-10, 08:55, said:

I agree that if you see the 4 and then the 5 one can't distinguish between Q54 and 754, but my partner is promoting her leads as a way to distinguish between these types of holdings.

I agree that if you see the 4 and then the 5 one can't distinguish between Q54 and 754, but my partner is promoting her leads as a way to distinguish between these types of holdings.

In both cases there may be other spot cards on view, or have been the opportunity to Smith Peter... obviously with any lead method you win some and you lose some.

Why don't you and your partner try one method for awhile and then switch to the other, and see whose method turns out to be more comfortable than the other's.
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#28 User is offline   jallerton 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 16:55

View PostEchognome, on 2011-February-09, 19:19, said:

I know many people will have their own views about this, but I don't think we can look at leads in isolation. We need to think of the whole carding system.


I agree. We need to know the rest of Elianna's leading agreements (including any differences between suit and NT contracts) before we can usefully answer the question.
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#29 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 17:13

View PostElianna, on 2011-February-09, 17:07, said:

And so from, say, four small she thinks that you should lead the second highest.

View PostVampyr, on 2011-February-10, 05:55, said:

This is standard in the UK. The second card played is not the smallest, but the original third highest.

This was also popular in the New York area in the 80s but fell out of favor in the 90s.

I also learned MUD as "standard" in the 80s, but it was regarded as "not advanced" by the 90s.
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#30 User is offline   Phil 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 17:22

I won't play anything other than low from 3 vs suits unless I've supported. I switched briefly 15 years ago and played top of nothing, but was never comfortable with it. Count is just so much more valuable than attitude assuming you have the ability and the interest to work out the hand.

If you are lazy, or don't like to count or watch spots, then attitude is better since you see the lead and instantly surmise that if pard doesn't like the suit - I better switch.
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#31 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 17:38

View PostPhil, on 2011-February-10, 17:22, said:

I won't play anything other than low from 3 vs suits unless I've supported. I switched briefly 15 years ago and played top of nothing, but was never comfortable with it. Count is just so much more valuable than attitude assuming you have the ability and the interest to work out the hand.

If you are lazy, or don't like to count or watch spots, then attitude is better since you see the lead and instantly surmise that if pard doesn't like the suit - I better switch.

But, MUD is giving count.
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#32 User is offline   gnasher 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 17:47

View PostVampyr, on 2011-February-10, 05:55, said:

This is standard in the UK.

Yes. I find it very hard to play anything else.

Quote

The second card played is not the smallest, but the original third highest.

Is it? I thought it was normal to give remaining count, so second then fourth from four, second then third from five, and second then first from three.
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
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#33 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 17:48

Elianna and my lead agreements are as follows. Hopefully this is what she likes to play. Perhaps she can comment further on what this new partner plays.

Against notrump: Lead of T or 9 promises zero or two higher, J denies a higher honor. A asks for count or unblock, lead of Q without the jack asks for unblock (i.e KQT9x). Otherwise normally lead highest of touching honors. When leading an unbid suit, we lead 4th best from length if holding an honor or if we otherwise want the suit returned (i.e. five small with side entries might lead 4th). From three to an honor (very rare lead in an unbid suit) we would lead low. When leading from small cards in an unbid suit we normally lead the highest card. When leading a suit partner bid in the auction but we have not supported, we will lead 3rd (high from doubleton). When leading a suit partner bid and we raised, we lead attitude (high from small cards, 3rd from an honor).

Against suits: Lead of T or 9 promises zero or two higher, J denies a higher honor, but we don't lead from interior sequences often. A is the normal lead from AK (K from KQ) although we would reverse this to show doubleton AK. From length in a suit, we lead 3rd from even and low from odd. This includes weak holdings like three or more small cards. We lead high from doubleton. In a suit we have bid or raised (i.e. that we cannot have shortness in) we may lead high from small cards to show attitude.
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#34 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 18:03

View PostPhil, on 2011-February-10, 17:22, said:

I won't play anything other than low from 3 vs suits unless I've supported. I switched briefly 15 years ago and played top of nothing, but was never comfortable with it. Count is just so much more valuable than attitude assuming you have the ability and the interest to work out the hand.

If you are lazy, or don't like to count or watch spots, then attitude is better since you see the lead and instantly surmise that if pard doesn't like the suit - I better switch.


I believe a more mellow opinion of the opposite viewpoint would be in order. It could be said, from the other camp, that if one has the ability and the interest to work out the hand, the distribution is easier to work out quickly from the auction and the play; while the LOCATION of high-card strength held by the defense is assisted by attitude leads ---and that if you are too lazy to count distribution down via inferences, then maybe strict count leads and signals are better.

I still think it is simply a matter of choice, coupled with knowing your pard is on the same wavelengh. The fact that leading low from honor or doubleton vs suit (trick one, blind)--and that failure to lead lowest denies an honor and denies a doubleton--- might solve E's issues doesn't mean it is perfect or right; just that some people do it, and it seems to work for them.
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#35 User is offline   akhare 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 18:33

While we are on the topic, about Slawinski leads?

Basically, not leading a sequence, lead right side up with an honour or upside down without an honour. This roughly translates into 3rd and 5th with an honour and 2/4th without...

Details here..
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#36 User is offline   mtvesuvius 

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Posted 2011-February-10, 18:51

There are 3 (maybe 4) honours in a suit. There are 52 cards in the deck (26 missing, on average 6 or 7 which are relevant to the suit being led). Which do you think it is easier to work out? High card placement or distribution around the table?
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#37 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-February-11, 01:13

View PostElianna, on 2011-February-10, 08:59, said:

Thank you very much for this comment. She claims to be a big follower of Lawrence (at least on bidding).

I don't really believe in appeals to authority as arguments, but she does, and as we disagree on authorities usually, this may be very useful.

Unfortunately for you, he doesn't express a strong opinion between low and top of nothing, IIRC.

#38 User is offline   gnasher 

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Posted 2011-February-11, 04:17

View Postmtvesuvius, on 2011-February-10, 18:51, said:

There are 3 (maybe 4) honours in a suit. There are 52 cards in the deck (26 missing, on average 6 or 7 which are relevant to the suit being led). Which do you think it is easier to work out? High card placement or distribution around the table?


That argument ignores some rather important considerations:
- It doesn't take account of what we already know. At the start of the hand, you tend to know more about the distribution than about the high card location. Most auctions say more about declarer's and overall high-card strength, than about the location of specific high cards.
- It doesn't consider the value of a particular piece of information. It may be more useful to know the location of declarer's high cards than his shape.

Another way to look at this: by the same argument, your signals and discards should all be count rather than attitude. Do you do that too?
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
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#39 User is offline   Mbodell 

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Posted 2011-February-11, 05:01

View Postakhare, on 2011-February-10, 18:33, said:

While we are on the topic, about Slawinski leads?

Basically, not leading a sequence, lead right side up with an honour or upside down without an honour. This roughly translates into 3rd and 5th with an honour and 2/4th without...

Details here..


That was my thought too. Rob Forster posted them online along with the accompanying study that analyzes all of these lead systems from an information theory point of view. The high level summary is (capital red is first card, bold green is second):

from "honors" (generally J+, but sometimes J-fifth or Q-sixth in a suit might be treated as all small and Txxx in NT might be Hxxx):
HxX
HxXx
HxxxX
HxxXxx

from all small cards:
xX
Xxx
Xxxx
Xxxxx
xXxxxx

except, if the top small card could be a working card (I.e., is too high of a spot card to waste like T73, 9643):
xXx
xXxx
xXxxx

They also have interesting choices when the led suit is headed by an honor sequence (card to lead is in red, capital H is start of a sequence and h is interior sequence so Hhh is like KJT):

HH - except if that is doubleton in a suit when the lower is led.
HHh
HHH - either can be led, depends if you want to emphasize the higher 2 honors (lead top) or the presence of all 3 (lead middle)
Hhh

Then from two card suits Hx you lead high except in suit contracts with Tx and 9x you lead the x.

I haven't played this system, but if you guys can't agree who has the "better" lead structure maybe a compromise where you try out a third way that isn't what either of you are used to might be best. That's how I started playing a strong club relay system with one partner. We couldn't decide between SA or 2/1 so we compromised into a strong club system.
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#40 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2011-February-11, 05:42

Ha! When Elianna said non-US, I automatically assumed European! I suppose it's the sister effect to what lead to 'American' being synonymous to US citizen.
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
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