Monday, June 21, 2004 5:44 AM
Hand Evaluation –
Declarer Play ( Love on Squeezes )
PITBULLS:
Re-read
Love on Squeezes today
after 35 years of collecting dust. The price on the book was $2.50 which gives
you an idea of its era. Anyway the book is a classic but its written in a mathematical
way ( author was a math professor ) . Love assumes the
reader is a Math major with a finely tuned deductive reasoning
brain . Here is
an attempt by
me ( below ) to simplify his
work on double squeezes and some other general comments.
All Squeezes
work due to the nature of the game of Bridge. The rules of Bridge allow
declarer to have two hands (his and the dummy) with two or more threats which allow him to gang up
on a poor defender(s) one hand.
The fact that Bridge is played in a clockwise direction is essential in identifying and executing squeezes. Squeezes
need the count rectified at 1 , 2 or 3 tricks from the contract making. Double squeezes
have the count rectified at one. We will discuss double squeezes which is one
chapter in his book.
Double
squeezes by definition involve two defenders
& three suits with their threats. The double squeeze will not work when all three threats are in the
same hand. One defender is behind a threat which is why it does not work
Therefore the dummy & declarers hand
share the three threats for squeezes to work . This means that one hand ( declarer or dummy ) must
hold a single threat as obviously
the other hand hold 2 threats..
Love uses this single threat hand as a reference point to
define the suits in a double squeeze by using letters:
Thus we
have potentially three types of double squeezes based on which threat is alone. However,
Love proves that Type L squeeze always fails due to the fact that Bridge is
played in a clockwise direction. LHO is behind the L threat .
He also splits the Type B squeezes up depending on how many winners in the B
suit. So eventually he finished with three types of double squeezes, Type R,
Type B1 and Type B2. Type B: when the B threat was accompanied by one winner
only (no winners is impossible: remember that the B suit must be accompanied by
an entry) , it is a Type B1 squeeze: when it is
accompanied by two or more winners, it
is a Type B2 squeeze. The fact that there are two or more winners in the B suit drastically changes the execution of this squeeze.
Love
shows that there is a drastic difference between the play of a simple squeeze
and a double squeeze. In a simple squeeze you can still have winners in your
threat suits after the squeeze takes place. In every
double squeeze , all your winners are cashed except for the B
suit. He also mentions that the squeeze card must always be in the hand opposite the B suit when there are no split entries in the B
suit.
So what complication ? You see a double squeeze, you work out which is the one threat hand,
the B/R/L/F suits: you decide on its classification based on the single threat hand even the B squeezes:The
meaning of R & L is based on the one threat hand: How do you play it?
Remember to leave the B entry alone.
You do the following:
Which is
the squeeze card? Don't know, don't care. Which of these squeezes are simultaneous,
which non-simultaneous? Don't know, don't care. Do I really mean any order for
Type B2? Yes, try it. If you get the right Type B2, it can be simultaneous, or
LHO can be squeezed first, or RHO, at the whim of the squeezer: how does that
fit into other writers' classifications ? Love makes
it irrelevant but they write about it at great lengths.
Love does
a good job of explaining the relationship between how “busy”
a defender is in protecting suits and the count being rectified.
When a defender has to guard three suits , there could be a
progressive squeeze or a strip squeeze with the count rectified at two. The
victim in a strip squeeze is busy because he may have surplus winners ,
a tenace position to guard or exit cards to
be squeezed out. Essentially in a two suited strip squeeze , a defender is busy in 3 suits so the count is
rectified at two ! When a defender is
busy in four suits , the count could be rectified at
three tricks ! In some squeezes like
compound squeezes , when the count is rectified at one
, the defender has to guard 3 suits , the squeeze matures on the 2Nd last free winner. Trump squeezes mature at the 2nd
last free winner because the defender is busy protecting against a ruff to set
up a suit. Squeezes can occur with the squeeze card being a loser. This
rectifies the count and squeezes the opponent at the same time! He does not
delve into suicide squeezes as a theme
though.
Love scoffs at the terms “criss-cross”
squeeze or “Vienna coup” as they are rightly just entry
conditions for the simple squeeze. The Squeeze literature makes much
ado about nothing with these fancy labels. Guard squeezes are just simple
squeezes when there is no entry to
either of the two threats. The fact that a defender is busy in a third suit ( protecting partner
against a finesse ) , Love calls them a “two and ½ suit squeeze”.
Love uses
many slam hands for his squeeze examples. After reading the book
, one gets the impression that all slams should be made somehow. Love gives
a hand in his chapter on compound squeezes where the contract is 7NT with only
12 top tricks. Love says “prove that this hand is cold on any distribution of
the opponents cards”
after the opening lead
gives one clue which he ( of course ) labels the basic threat
! He goes on to list the simple squeeze possibilities and saying failing that
if the defender is busy in 3 suits you can force a discard out of him that
causes the standard double squeezes to come into play. In other words this hand
is cold
on a double squeeze or a simple squeeze!
Love
spends some time on squeeze defense . Not letting the
declarer rectify the count , killing entries, not allowing squeezes to repeat
by allowing the suit without an entry to be established , making a discard very
early so that it’s not obvious the King is singleton , deception etc . Love encourages running your free suit
early to induce pseudo squeezes as concealment
is certainly better then revealment in squeeze
defense.
Love
fails to mention the main purpose of learning Squeeze theory. Squeeze play is
necessary as a remedy against the bidding of my partners which
lands me in some dicey contracts. These contracts usually need all the help
they can get J
.