Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Trump_coup> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 37 of
37
with 100 triples per page.
- Trump_coup abstract "The trump coup is a contract bridge coup used when the hand on lead (typically the dummy) has no trumps remaining, while the next hand in rotation has only trumps, including a high one that would have been onside for a direct finesse if a trump could have been led. The play involves forcing that hand to ruff, only to be overruffed. A similar motive is met in coup en passant, where indirect finesse is used instead of direct.In the end position below, spades are trump. The king of spades is onside, but declarer (South) cannot finesse against it because dummy has no trumps remaining.Declarer takes all three tricks by playing a heart first. When a club is led from dummy, East has nothing but spades remaining and therefore must ruff, and South can overruff with the ace or queen according to which spade East plays.A trump coup is not possible in a double-finesse position, since declarer with a holding like A-Q-10 over defender's K-J-x would take the first trump trick and then would have to give the defender a free finesse. In effect, a trump coup against a king (or rather, the second-highest remaining trump) must find it guarded by exactly one other trump. (If East held another card instead of the small trump, say a diamond, North-South could still play the hand as just described, but the trump coup would be unnecessary as South could just drop the king of spades instead.)Similarly, with A-K-J of trumps in hand, a trump coup against Q-x-x on the right is possible, and so on.To execute a trump coup, declarer must have exactly the same number of trumps as the defender. If declarer had more trumps, entry could not be given to dummy at the critical point when the defender will have only trumps remaining. Sometimes a declarer with too many trumps, but needing to do a trump coup, can set up the desired position by entering dummy and leading a suit he can ruff, to shorten his own trumps.".
- Trump_coup wikiPageID "3395857".
- Trump_coup wikiPageLength "3733".
- Trump_coup wikiPageOutDegree "8".
- Trump_coup wikiPageRevisionID "555058201".
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bridge_coups.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Contract_bridge.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Coup_(bridge).
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Coup_en_passant.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Devils_coup.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Finesse.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Glossary_of_contract_bridge_terms.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLink Smother_play.
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLinkText "Grand coup".
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLinkText "Trump coup".
- Trump_coup wikiPageWikiLinkText "trump coup".
- Trump_coup hasPhotoCollection Trump_coup.
- Trump_coup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:BridgeHandNWES.
- Trump_coup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clear.
- Trump_coup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clubs.
- Trump_coup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Diamonds.
- Trump_coup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Hearts.
- Trump_coup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Trump_coup subject Category:Bridge_coups.
- Trump_coup hypernym Coup.
- Trump_coup type Article.
- Trump_coup type MilitaryConflict.
- Trump_coup type Article.
- Trump_coup type Coup.
- Trump_coup comment "The trump coup is a contract bridge coup used when the hand on lead (typically the dummy) has no trumps remaining, while the next hand in rotation has only trumps, including a high one that would have been onside for a direct finesse if a trump could have been led. The play involves forcing that hand to ruff, only to be overruffed. A similar motive is met in coup en passant, where indirect finesse is used instead of direct.In the end position below, spades are trump.".
- Trump_coup label "Trump coup".
- Trump_coup sameAs Parada_(brydż).
- Trump_coup sameAs m.099c5x.
- Trump_coup sameAs Q7847790.
- Trump_coup sameAs Q7847790.
- Trump_coup wasDerivedFrom Trump_coup?oldid=555058201.
- Trump_coup isPrimaryTopicOf Trump_coup.