Sunday, August 14, 2005
8:14 PM
Hand Evaluation - 3rd & 5th leads
(Present count )
PITBULLS:
Over the years there I has been a
tug of war between 4th best leads vrs 3rd
and 5th. Experts have argued which lead
convention is better. The latest consensus among experts at the national level is that they both are ! 3rd & 5th best
lead are better against suit contracts
& 4th best against NT
contracts. In suit contracts , it is
important to know that partners low card lead is 3rd or 5th for cash out purposes ,
switches & planning your defense. It is less important in suit contracts
that you “burn spot cards” by
leading your 2nd lowest card to show 4 of the suit.
In NT, when you waste spot cards on your opening lead with 4 of them
, it can often be fatal. Also the
rule of 11 in NT contracts is invaluable
in knowing what is going on with the suit. Bryan Maksysmetz
knew that I played 4th best with Tom & 3rd & 5th
with some partners. Therefore , he suggested that we
should be a switch hitter in this regard. He says most top level players alternate
between suit & NT contracts with 3rd and 5th best
leads. I can see the advantages now that I play both lead conventions with my two regular partners.
Playing 3rd & 5th
best with some partners , has opened my eyes on the importance of
differentiating between 3 to an honour lead as
opposed to 4 of an honour in suit contracts. With
standard 4th best , you cannot tell the
difference which can be fatal in suit
contracts. In NT contracts , 3 card suits are hardly ever good opening leads except when demanded by
the bidding , so partner can normally work it out anyway from the distribution given by the bidding.. Ambiguity is the
killer in Bridge & 3rd & 5th solves one of the
worst guesses in Bridge.
Most experts play "present
count" instead of original count. When you are returning a suit
in NT as opposed to a suit
, you are playing 4th best ( present
count) . In a suit contract , you are
returning 3rd & 5th ( present count ) after already
playing one. Discards are always present count .
This present count treatment is Bridge World Standard.
In a NT contract , if you had ♠K9752
& won the King , return your 4th best the deuce ( present count)
. In a suit contract , you would return your 2nd
lowest from 4 ( present count ). ♥K972 , you win your king in a suit & return the deuce (
present count in a suit showing 3 ) . In NT , you
would return the 7 ( MUD) when you play that treatment otherwise top of nothing with three. If you started
with 3 to an honour your present count in both NT & a suit contract is the
same a doubleton , so no problem.
My partner against 3NT lead 4th best from ♠J10xx
& ♠AQ was on the board. I won the king from ♠K9752 so I
returned the deuce ( present count showing 4 ) .
Partner now just applies a pattern 5-4-2-2 so knows to unblock with a spade
honour so I can get my 5th spade to beat the contract. If I had an
original ♠K2 , I would switch as I
know we are attacking declarers 5 card suit. In a suit contract
, unblocking probably irrelevant.
Some more hints I got from Maksymetz in discussing players defensive cardings at the
national level. Smith echoes are
only useful in NT contracts. In
suit contracts , if you cannot beat dummy’s card ,
Bryan suggests suit preference
rather than count. It’s obviously not attitude , when
you cannot beat dummys honour
card ( Ace & King excluded ) so he feels suit
preference is more useful than count in suit contracts only.
Bryan has strong opinions on “coded 9’s & 10’s”. He says they give
too much information on the opening lead but use them during the middle of the hand helps the defense more
than declarer. During the middle of the hand, it is more
important to show whether you have a real interior sequence switch. Anyway
these views are
just his opinions. Any comments ?