The Finesse: Only a Last Resort
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As a common technique, so much is often taken for granted. Often there are questions that need be resolved. Is it a two-way guess? Which suit should be finessed first? Who is it safe to finesse into? Which card should be led may make the difference between success and failure. Are there clues in the bidding or lack of bidding?
One definition of “experience” is what we get when we don’t get what we want. After you play bridge for a while, you will learn that the finesses you desperately need to work are the ones that fail. Profit from experience. Avoid an unnecessary finesse that may lead to disaster if it loses.
James Marsh Sternberg MD
Dr James Marsh Sternberg is a radiologist in Palm Beach Gardens Florida & Professor of Radiology at two northern universities. He currently teaches bridge in Florida. He has won several North American National Championships and has written extensively for many bridge publications. He is the author of “Playing To Trick One”, There Are No Mulligans In Bridge. “Dr J” lives in Palm Beach Gardens with Vickie Bader.He can be reached at mmay001@aol.com.
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The Finesse - James Marsh Sternberg MD
2021 James Marsh Sternberg Md (Dr. J). All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 04/16/2021
ISBN: 978-1-6655-1583-2 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-6655-1582-5 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2021902084
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,
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Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO
THE MEMORY OF
MY PARENTS
EMIL AND LEONORE
STERNBERG
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Timing
Which Finesse?
Second Suits
Loser-On-Loser
Endplays, Elimination Plays
Lots of this and that
Drawing Trumps
No Finesse Based on HCP’s
Danger Hands
Squeeze Play
Free Finesses
Unusual Finesses
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book would not have been possible without the help of several friends. Frank Stewart, Michael Lawrence, Anne Lund, Eddie Kantar, and Marty Bergen all provided suggestions for material for the book.
I am forever indebted to Hall of Famer Fred Hamilton and the late Bernie Chazen, without whose guidance and teaching I would not have achieved whatever success I have had in bridge.
I want to thank my editor Randy Baron for his valuable assistance. Any errors in the books are totally mine.
And of course I want to thank Vickie Lee Bader, whose love and patience helped guide me thru the many hours of this endeavor.
James Marsh Sternberg MD
Palm Beach Gardens FL
INTRODUCTION
How much do you really know about finesses, one of the most common techniques in bridge and yet one of the most abused. The term finesseaholic
describes a player who never met a finesse he/she didn’t want to take. So often the finesse is really a LAST RESORT, only when other more promising lines of play are not available or have failed.
As a common technique, so much is often taken for granted. Often there are questions that need be resolved. Is it a two-way guess? Which suit should be finessed first? Which hand is it safe to finesse into? Which card should be led may make the difference between success and failure. Are there clues in the bidding or lack of bidding?
One definition of experience
is what we get when we don’t get what we want. After you play bridge for a while, you will learn that the finesses you desperately need to work are the ones that fail. Profit from experience. Avoid an unnecessary finesse that may lead to disaster if it loses.
Bridge is a hand, not an isolated suit. Just because a finesse is possible does not mean you have to take it. While it may be the right way to play that particular suit, it may not be the right way to play the bridge hand.
This book is divided into chapters, but there is a lot of overlap. Choosing which suit to finesse to set up a second suit could belong in Which Finesse?
or Second Suit.
And Timing
, a chapter itself, plays a role in most chapters. The hands are not really a quiz; you can see all four hands, but cover the East/West hands and see how you do.
Big Clue: It’s always good to be the other declarer
.
A QUICK FINESSE QUIZ PART I
What is the best way to play the following combinations? Assume declarer has plenty of entries.
1. Lead low and finesse the nine. If this loses to the King or Queen, finesse the Jack on the second round. This is better than finessing the Jack on the first round since West is more likely to have K 10 or Q 10 than K Q.
2. Lead low to the King, intending to finesse the 10 next. This is the general principle of leading towards the unsupported high card first, reserving the 10 for the second round. This saves a trick when an opponent may have a singleton honor.
3. Cask the A-K, the percentage play with nine cards in the suit.
4. Lead low to the 9, then low to the 10. South has an approximately 75% chance of taking three tricks.
5. Lead low to the King. If West follows and East wins the Ace, play the Queen next with nine cards.
6. Lead low from dummy and finesse the 10. If this loses to the Queen or Jack, lead low from dummy again and finesse again. It is more likely East began with the Queen or Jack than West began with both honors.
A FINESSE QUIZ PART II
Now you are finessing against West. How should you proceed?
7. Lead low and finesse the ten. South cannot afford to lead high on the first round if West has the singleton King. If the 10 wins, South enters his hand and leads an honor.
8. Lead the Jack. With ten cards, the high lead cannot cost. To lead low to the queen will leave West a trick if he started with K 10 x.
9. Lead low and finesse the nine. If it loses, lead low again and finesse the ten. Do not lead the Jack which will cost a trick if West started with s singleton or doubleton honor.
10. Cash the Ace, then enter the South hand and lead the Jack. South can afford here to guard against East having the singleton Queen. If East follows low, South must lead the Jack on the second round.
If he leads low and finesses the 10, West will make a trick with Q 9 x x.
TIMING
TIMING: NO FINESSE
Contract: 3 NT
Opening Lead: 124828.png 4
Declarer had visions of lots of tricks. If everything went well, twelve tricks were possible. And being of the mindset of I never met a finesse I didn’t like,
played low at trick one.
East won the king and shifted to a club. Twelve quickly became eight.
Question: What should have declarer been thinking about?
At the other table, the opening lead was the same. This declarer grabbed the heart ace and started racing for home. After giving up a diamond, he was playing for overtricks, if there were any.
It’s good to think about what could go wrong before, not after it happens.
TIMING: NO FINESSES
Opening Lead: 124828.png Jack
The heart jack won the first trick. West continued a heart to East’s ace, declarer ruffed the third heart. After drawing trumps, declarer was looking at two potential losers in clubs and one in diamonds.
He played a diamond to the dummy and led a low club to his ten. This must have been a ‘practice’ finesse because even if he set up a club trick, he had no dummy entry to use it. All those potential losers became real ones. Down one.
Question: Could you have timed this better (after being given an opportunity)?
After drawing trumps, declarer is ‘a step ahead’ by just leading the club king from his hand. He can win the diamond return in hand and lead the club ten.
The jack of clubs is good for a diamond discard, and the ace of diamonds is still there as an entry.
Given an opportunity? Yes, East knew the third heart was not cashing and should have started attacking the diamonds. At that time, it was the defense that was ‘a step ahead’.
FINESSE? TIMING
Contract: 4 124828.png
Opening Lead: ♠ 2
Declarer, concerned he might have four losers, took a spade finesse at trick one. He felt he had a 75% chance since he needed one out of two finesses to be successful. East won and shifted to a club. When the diamond finesse lost, (you knew that was coming), the defense cashed two clubs. Down one.
Partner, you started with ten tricks, what happened?
, asked North.
Question: What was North referring to? The other declarer made four hearts.
The other declarer counted six trumps, one spade, one club, and two diamonds. But as so often happens, it was going to be a race to the finish line. And right now, who was ahead? The good guys, North/South.
This declarer won the spade ace, drew trumps, and took a diamond finesse. It lost but now declarer had ten tricks when that club came flying his way from East. Six hearts, one spade, one club, and two diamonds.
FINESSE? TIMING
Opening Lead: ♠ 3
Declarer won the ace and cashed the three high trumps. He played the club king, then led a club to the jack. East won, cashed a spade, and shifted to the jack of diamonds.
Declarer won and led the club ace. West ruffed and cashed a diamond.
Down one.
Question: Could you have timed this better to make four hearts?
The other declarer tried to stay a step ahead. He won the opening spade lead and cashed three high trumps. But then he cashed the A-K of clubs, feeling the finesse was likely to lose and give the timing back to the defense.
Then he conceded a club. East cashed a spade and shifted to diamonds. Declarer won the ace and discarded his last diamond on the good club.
He lost one spade, one heart, and one club.
NO FINESSES, TAKE YOUR NINE AND GO HOME
Contract: 3 NT
Opening Lead: ♢ 7
The first declarer instinctively took a finesse at trick one, not picturing what might go wrong. East showed him, winning the diamond king and switching to a heart. Now the timing was in favor of the defenders, no longer the declarer.
West won the heart king and returned the deuce. The jack in dummy won, but when declarer started the spades, East won and continued hearts.
Down one.
Question: How did declarer let this one get away? So many potential tricks.
The other declarer, with the same opening lead, played the ace. No finesse, thank you. He forced out the spade ace and had nine tricks. Four spades, four clubs, and one diamond. What’s the problem?
FINESSE? NO, BLOCK THEIR SUIT
Contract: 3 NT
Opening Lead: 124828.png 6
Declarer # 1 finessed the queen at trick one. He later lost a diamond finesse.
Question: How did the above declarer do? What did you play at trick one?
The other declarer, # 2, won the ace at trick one and lost a diamond finesse.
Let’s look at four possibilities: Think about the opening lead. East rates to have an honor card. Two scenarios:
Declarer # 1. East had the heart king and returned a heart. Down one.
Declarer # 1. West had the heart king. The declarer made 3 NT
Declarer # 1 made 3 NT half the time, depending on who had the heart king.
Declarer # 2. East had the heart king, but the suit was blocked. He made 3 NT.
Declarer # 2. West had the heart king. West could only cash two more tricks, the nine was a big card. He made 3 NT.
The other declarer, # 2, made 3 NT both times by not finessing, regardless of who had the heart king.
How did you do?