Opening lead?
#1
Posted 2015-February-17, 02:24
Ax
Axxx
Qxx
(x means 7 or lower)
Not a great collection to lead from but it goes
1NT-2D (hearts)
2NT-3NT
all pass
2NT showed "a max without a heart fit" so you can imagine that this is not the bermuda bowl final, but you still have to lead something.
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2015-February-17, 02:40
#3
Posted 2015-February-17, 12:01
#4
Posted 2015-February-18, 09:17
#5
Posted 2015-February-18, 10:21
gwnn, on 2015-February-17, 02:24, said:
Ax
Axxx
Qxx
(x means 7 or lower)
Not a great collection to lead from but it goes
1NT-2D (hearts)
2NT-3NT
all pass
2NT showed "a max without a heart fit" so you can imagine that this is not the bermuda bowl final, but you still have to lead something.
At IMPs, you have to assume partner has a card, since if he doesn't, declarer will make 4 or 5 depending on the heart situation.
Assume partner has a heart trick, as he rates to have 4 of them. It seems to me your big chance is that dummy has KQxxx or KJ10xx. That's still only three tricks, and he's making 3NT even if you get your ♣Q.
Low from Axxx in an unbid suit is worse (or should I say even worse) than Jxxx in terms of possibly giving away a trick. But it seems less likely to give away the suit - you get a major fail only with four diamonds to two honors in dummy, possibly giving away a trick you would have gotten with the club Q.
Even with the slight preference for a major suit - unlikely that dummy has 4 spades! - I'm leading a low diamond at IMPs. It looks like the best chance to set the contract, although not a high percentage shot. You also have the possibility of killing dummy's only outside entry.
At matchpoints the story changes. I want to lead passively, and a low spade is somewhat less terrible than a low diamond in terms of giving away a trick.
I really wouldn't think about it much. I'd lead a low ♦ at IMPs, which just looks like the best attacking lead, and a low ♠ at matchpoints, which looks like the least dangerous of the four suits.
#6
Posted 2015-February-19, 18:59
Results:
S 2,3 sets 10.5% defensive tricks 3.19
S 7 sets 10.5% defensive tricks 3.18
S J sets 8.5% defensive tricks 3.07
D A sets 8.0% defensive tricks 3.05
H A sets 6.5% defensive tricks 3.04
D 2,3 sets 6.0% defensive tricks 3.05
D 7 sets 6.0% defensive tricks 3.04
H 2 sets 6.0% defensive tricks 2.83
C 2,3 sets 5.5% defensive tricks 2.84
C Q sets 5.5% defensive tricks 2.80
Analysis: Low spade best at both IMPS sets contract most often, and at MPs has the greatest average defensive tricks. Next are J of S and A of D at IMPS. The other cards bunch at 6.5% to 5.5% sets at iMPS with the low H and all C lagging at MPS.
#7
Posted 2015-February-19, 20:42
#8
Posted 2015-February-19, 21:09
#9
Posted 2015-February-20, 01:15
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2015-February-20, 02:30
#11
Posted 2015-February-21, 08:01
#12
Posted 2015-February-21, 13:05
Mbodell, on 2015-February-20, 02:30, said:
Maybe that's how bad it is!!
I can't believe it's still better than a diamond bleh
https://www.youtube....hungPlaysBridge
#13
Posted 2015-March-02, 06:54
S 2,3 17.94% set 3.52 average defensive tricks
D 2,3 17.69 3.52 tricks
S 7 17.59 3.51 tricks
D 7 16.89 3.49 tricks
D A 15.79 3.45 tricks
H A 13.89 3.30 tricks
S J 13.79 3.33 tricks
H 2 9.95 3.21 tricks
C 2,3 9.60 3.21 tricks
C Q 8.15 3.12 tricks
Now low spade and low diamond are the two best leads, the low spade continuing to be slightly preferable at IMPs, where setting the contract percentage is our proxy. As the original problem was IMPS, still a victory for the unbid major! (Significant at the .05 level at IMPS) The two Aces fall behind the low pointed suit leads.
Note: continued to allow opening NT on all 5422 hands. Sample of 325 with purely balanced NT openers showed similar results.