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Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - Printable Version +- Power Pinochle Forums (http://www.powerpinochle.com/forum) +-- Forum: Power Pinochle Community (http://www.powerpinochle.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=12) +--- Forum: Pinochle Game Play - Defense (http://www.powerpinochle.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=24) +--- Thread: Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control (/showthread.php?tid=394) |
Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - richardpaulhall - 02-17-2013 When Partner leads an Ace in a suit, if you hold the remainder of the Aces, and I assume a buttressing 10 so we don't lose a trick, the standard signal seems to play Ace on Ace to show suit control. Partner can now get to you as your Aces control the suit, barring a trump by the opponents. But this signal breaks down when Partner leads the 3rd Ace. If I signal with a Ace, the 4th, if the Opponent that plays after Partner has a 10 as well, he will win the trick. Do I have this right? Am I missing something? Is "Ace on Ace" slated for the glossary, or is this a topic for the Beginners Area? RE: Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - mickmackusa - 02-17-2013 (02-17-2013, 02:45 AM)richardpaulhall Wrote: When Partner leads an Ace in a suit, if you hold the remainder of the Aces, and I assume a buttressing 10 so we don't lose a trick, the standard signal seems to play Ace on Ace to show suit control. To reference the PP Glossary, the Ace on Ace term would be covered by "Lead Back." By its definition, you play an ![]() ![]() Ramifications: If you play the 4th ![]() ![]() 1. Then your partner can maintain control and try to run his ![]() 2. You have potentially wasted a Winner. ToreadorElder, has fantastic and lengthy posts on the subject of signalling while retaining Winners. Enjoy this thread @ Play: The 2 basic signals. RE: Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - richardpaulhall - 02-17-2013 I brought up "lead back" specifically to address the loss of a winner. When I play a "lead back" ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() RE: Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - mickmackusa - 02-17-2013 (02-17-2013, 03:52 PM)richardpaulhall Wrote: I brought up "lead back" specifically to address the loss of a winner. Right, I don't recall the loss of a winner being covered in those posts. I think making this play without the supporting ![]() 1. Would your partner notice/understand if you threw a non-point lead back card? + If so, save the Winner. 2. What has been the texture of the tricks already thrown in that suit. More specifically, is the suit likely to be trumped on trick 4 or 5? + If the suit is likely to be trumped soon, saving the point may make better sense. 3. If you still want to play the ![]() + If you can make more Winners from the sacrifice of that one Winner, then it sounds like a reasonable justification. I would like to hear from rak and TE on this. There may be additional considerations or improvements on my thoughts. RE: Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - rakbeater - 02-18-2013 (02-17-2013, 03:52 PM)richardpaulhall Wrote: I brought up "lead back" specifically to address the loss of a winner. There is almost no scenario where laying the 4th ![]() ![]() A bigger question regarding the 4th ace of a suit would be, if the third ![]() ![]() Stats to consider: If you have a 4 card suit, the 4th ![]() In a 5 card suit, the 4th ![]() In a 6 card suit, the 4th ![]() In a 7 card suit, the 4th ![]() In an 8 card suit, the 4th ![]() With a 9 card or longer suit, the 4th ![]() These stats are based on the assumption that everyone still has trump in their hand. RE: Ace on Ace Showing Suit Control - ToreadorElder - 02-18-2013 I'll disagree with rak slightly. If partner plays 4th ![]() ![]() a) partner started with exactly 3 cards. b) partner started with 8...MAYBE 7...and has no more points to play. c) it's the point that saves the meld/bid d) I'm declarer, and I sandbagged the suit originally d) first. This is somewhat unlikely, as it feels like it requires dummy hasn't been in; otherwise, he'd cash his lone ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() c) is also relatively uncommon, and much more likely on defense. a) implies that partner will be ruffing, which gets him in. So it's a signal in an unusual sense. Partner SHOULD NOT play 4th ![]() b) is the tricky case...7 or 8 cards. Generally, the only time (even with an 8 card suit) that I'll play 4th on 3rd, is when: 1. I think we need the point. Case: I'm dummy and I only had 4-6 meld. Partner needs to pull well over a split deck to make. 2. I have no great desire to be put on lead. That means my side-suit aces are in 4 or 5 card suits...and I don't have many. Even then...I'm not sure I would. Reverse the situation and consider the position from partner's perspective. When I play 4th ![]() ![]() ![]() This *could* happen with 7 cards, but obviously the length difference, even tho it's only 1 card, is very significant. As noted, opponents' cards may help. Say the first 2 leads draw: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() then the 3rd ace: ![]() ![]() The opponents won't play points voluntarily. At this point, 6 of the 8 non-ace points have been played, and 4th seat is either going to play #7, or ruff. If he's ruffing, I actually don't want to play my ![]() |