Monday, May 21, 2012

To Rabbi or Not to Rabbi

I guess this would be considered a successful regional for the 2.5 days I attended. Joel, Jimmy, my dad, and I won a bracket 2 KO without breaking a sweat. It’s still amazing how huge a difference there is between the top bracket and everyone else. We are one of the few teams that falls solidly in between the true top flight and the low flight A and that seems to be how most of the teams I play on are. Sunday, we placed 2nd in A/X – typical. Here’s one hand where I kind of snookered Tom Carmichael. I’m glad it was an expert declaring because he would count out the hand and reach what I think is the correct decision, albeit a decision that didn’t work out well in this case. Here it is (hands rotated, because I would never sit east): 
Dealer: E
Vul: Both
North
A9x
Qxxx
AQJx
Jx
South
KJxxxx
Ax
xx
Qxx

West
North
East
South
1
1
X
2
3
3
Pass
4
Pass
Pass
Pass

Put yourself in Tom's shoes. West leads the HK. Yay! Tom wins the ace, plays a spade to the A and a spade back. No yay as east shows out, discarding an encouraging club. To buy some time for making the critical guess, he gives west his spade trick (east discarding a heart). West then leads a middle club, east plays AK and another. After winning the CQ, most declarers would probably just take the diamond finesse and be done with it. Instead, Tom realizes that east has opened the bidding and is known to have only 8 hcp outside of diamonds. Meanwhile, west has made a negative double and is known to have only 5 hcp outside diamonds and the DK is the critical card.

Tom cashes 2 trumps to see if that gains any helpful discards. East discards another club and then a heart and west discards some diamonds. So east started with 5 clubs and west only 3 – interesting. Now we know that east’s distribution is either 1-5-2-5 or 1-6-1-5 and west is either 3-2-5-3 or 3-1-6-3. The odds certainly favor them having the most distributional hands (1-6-1-5 with east and 3-1-6-3 with west) since they were so active in the auction with so few values. If east started with Kx, the contract is doomed. He pitches after dummy so no red suit squeeze is possible. Now Tom has to guess whether east started with stiff K or small stiff. Is x, JTxxxx, x, AKTxx enough to open the bidding (first seat, all vulnerable)? Is Qxx, K, Txxxxx, xxx enough to make a negative double of 1S? It basically comes down to deciding which of those are more likely. If it matters, I was the opener and my dad (certainly the more aggressive bidder of the two of us) was the responder. I’m pretty sure I would have tried to Rabbi (drop a singleton K offside), as Tom did. Even if you think that me opening with a 6-5 8-count and my dad negative doubling with a 6331 5-count are equally likely, successfully Rabbi-ing is a cooler play and therefore the one I would go for. Despite this big swing for us, Tom and company (Capp Jr, Onstott, and Casen) won the match by 11, won the event, and were the top masterpoint winners for the whole tournament by a big margin.
Dealer: W
Vul: Both
North
A9x
Qxxx
AQJx
Jx
West
Qxx
K
KTxxxx
xxx
East
x
JT9xxx
x
AKTxx
South
KJxxxx
Ax
xx
Qxx

2 comments:

  1. Congratulations on the good results!

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  2. Hi Andre, thanks for the write up! Just a couple of additional comments:

    1) "No red squeeze is possible." This actually is not strictly true, but it depends on the diamond spot in my hand. Today I had 7x, so you are correct. If I had Tx, for example, I could discard the QD and squeeze you (trump criss-cross) if you had held the KD.

    2) One small other factor I took into account: while either hand seemed possible, if your dad had the 8 count as he did, I thought he might consider bidding 2D (light of course) some percentage of the time. With a 5 count, he would never do so. That finally swayed me into the (incorrect today!) decision.

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