Thursday,
August 31, 2006 4:01 AM
Hand Evaluation – Leads ( Standard Situations )
PITBULLS:
There are some situations in Bridge
that come up so often
that the defense is “Standard” . The opponents are
interfering with a Michaels Q bid or an unusual NT which is doubled by your
side. This situation calls for a standard
defense of a trump lead.
Another standard situation involves you “owning the hand” in a forcing pass sense , they have interfered with a fit but are doubled. In
both these types of auctions, their only source of tricks is by ruffing as the hand is usually a misfit in the
secondary suit with a lack of resources overall. In all
these auctions , your lead should be a trump regardless of your hand. These are
the only auctions where you should lead
blind. A trump lead is better than cashing your tricks or even
looking at the board first.
A Tormentee
had ♠KQJxx ♥Kxxxxx ♦A ♣x , opened 1♥. The opponents overcalled 2NT , partner
doubled showing the minors and most likely a misfit. Partner wants to double
them at the 3 level. The opponents bid 3♦ but the Tormentee makes the correct bid of 3♠. You are vul , the opponents are not , so you would never leave the
double in with a 6-5 in the majors . So you bid in front of partner who most
likely wants to double. However , the 2NT bidder had no fear , leapt to 5♦ which your
partner doubles. You lead your trump Ace , the board
is ♠xx ♥Q
♦K10xxx ♣AQJxx . Since partner says your side has the majority of HCP’s with her double , she is
marked with one or both the major suit Aces. You see 25 HCP between your hand
and the dummy so there is only 15 HCP left with partner holding at least 10
HCP. You switch to a heart so partner wins the Ace and continues with the queen
of trump. When the smoke clears , you pick up +1100.
I played this hand today when my
partner got a little exuberant on the auction. The Tormentee
did not lead a trump so I escaped for –500. I got to ruff clubs with my 3 small
diamonds and singleton club. The Tormentee was forced
to overruff clubs with her trump Ace which in effect
was a loser on loser. In these auctions, a trump lead is a 2 trump for
one exchange which is a key in defending cross ruffing
situations.
Opening leads are a bidding skill. You listen to the
bidding & make the opening lead that the bidding calls for
, not the card combinations in your hand. The standard leads with honour sequences or 4th best
are for situations where there has been
no bidding to guide you. All experts have a normal standard lead based on the bidding. When that lead is not made , bells should start ringing. Why is partner making
that lead ? The answer is that the lead is a
singleton. This is how experts identify singletons.
Playing with weak partners who make random opening leads ,
it is difficult if not impossible to determine that the lead is a singleton.
They should not be leading that suit based on the bidding but they regularly
do. Playing with Perry , the opponents were in 3♦ & I led a
heart a suit that dummy had bid & rebid. What a terrible
lead on this auction ! I had a stiff so if
partner feels that I normally do not make such ridiculous leads
, it must be a
singleton. Trust your partner’s Bridge ability L . A player in Calgary lamented that 7 times he
led a singleton & not once did
he get a ruff !!! This is because his partner has not tuned into the bidding &
questioned why the expected correct lead based
on the auction did not come. “Why did the dog not
bark “ says Sherlock Holmes. He plays too often with
players who do not know how to make opening
leads in Bridge , so he failed to realize that this “bad lead” was a singleton.
Normal leads are routine.
The unbid suit ,
dummys 2nd bid suit in NT , partner’s
suit when she overcalled . Doubles of Q bids ,
KCB responses or failure to double these bids are
the obvious leads. Partner not overcalling a major
when she had a chance should negate that lead . The
rank order of Q biding by the opponents quite often points to the correct
opening lead as they have shown weakness in that suit. These natural leads are negated with a lead directing double. When you do not make the normal good leads , how are you read the lead directing double which negates the normal or natural lead ? How are you to read
partner for a singleton when her leads are just “random” ?
Very difficult , if not impossible. Down to demoting
the game of Bridge as just a series of good or bad guesses.