Note: 
                Only summaries are included below - 
                  see book for details
                Hold That 
                Finesse                                                                                    
                109
                Take 
                Everything in 
                Sight                                                                         
                113
                I Never Met a 
                Five-Card Suit I Didn't 
                Like                                           114
                Finesses Do 
                Have Their Day in the 
                Sun                                                 116
                How Low Can 
                You 
                Go?                                                                            
                119
                  
                  
                  
                  Hold That Finesse
                  
                  
                  
                  “A finesse is a tool; and you don't use a tool without rhyme 
                  or reason, just because it happens to be lying about.”
                   
                  
                  
                  
                                                                      Alfred 
                  Sheinwold
                  
                  Do 
                  you like to finesse? Would you believe I do not?
                  
                  I 
                  will never forget my initial exposure to finesses. I was 14, 
                  and my mother had just given me my first bridge book, the 
                  best-selling 5 Weeks to Winning Bridge by Alfred 
                  Sheinwold. After 18 chapters of basics and bidding, I could 
                  not wait to play. Chapters 19 and 20 dealt with finessing. As 
                  I read, I practiced with a deck of cards. It was going well, 
                  and I could not wait to play so that I could finesse until I 
                  dropped¼
                  
                  
                  Chapter 21 was titled “When Not to Finesse!” Wow! Sheinwold 
                  began by stating: “Having learned how to finesse, we must now 
                  decide whether to do so.” You could have knocked me over with 
                  a feather. He gave many examples of hands where it was wrong 
                  to finesse. Incredible.
                  
                  Of 
                  course, the above is inevitable. In any game, the first step 
                  for new players is to learn the basics. Once they understand 
                  them, the next step is to apply that knowledge.
                  
                  When 
                  it comes to finesses, a major philosophical difference 
                  separates the masses from the most accomplished players. Most 
                  players are eager to finesse. Finessing is simple and it 
                  provides immediate gratification. Experts do not like to 
                  finesse, and never have. Why? Finesses lose half the time. 
                  I compare the expert's mindset with that of a professional 
                  gambler: Do you think he gets rich on 50–50 propositions?
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  Take Everything in Sight
                  
                  Play
                  
                  Given 
                  the ability to see all 13 cards, and no shortage of entries 
                  to  each hand, can you win three tricks against perfect 
                  defense? The lead is in the South hand.
                    
                      
                        |  | 
                        NorthA92
 |  | 
                      
                        | 
                        
                        WestK5
 |   | 
                        EastJ1076
 | 
                      
                        |  | 
                        South 
                        (You)Q843
 |  | 
                    
                    
                    
                    Lead low from the South hand and insert the nine when West 
                    correctly plays low. East will win the 10. When you regain 
                    the lead, cash dummy's ace, capturing West's king. It is now 
                    easy to lead dummy's two and finesse through East's 
                    remaining J7 — you have the Q8 behind him. For those 
                    interested in bridge lingo, this is an example of an 
                    intra-finesse.
                  
                  
                  Defend
                  
                  You 
                  are East and it is your lead against a notrump contract. Can 
                  you win four tricks in this suit?
                    
                      
                        |  | 
                        North1076
 |  | 
                      
                        | 
                        
                        WestA93
 |   | 
                        EastKJ82
 | 
                      
                        |  | 
                        South 
                        (You)Q54
 |  | 
                    
                    
                    The 
                    answer is to lead the jack, which serves to neutralize 
                    dummy's ten. If South ducks, your jack holds. Your side then 
                    wins the ace and king, ending in your hand with the good 
                    eight.
                  
                  
                  Suppose South covers the jack with his queen. West wins his 
                  ace and returns the nine. Now you are sitting pretty with the 
                  K82 behind dummy's 107. This surrounding play allows 
                  you to run the suit. Well done!
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  I Never Met a Five-Card Suit I Didn't Like
                  
                  The 
                  average declarer’s point of view is often short-sighted. All 
                  he notices are his honor cards. He begins the play of a hand 
                  by grabbing the obvious winners, then tries a finesse or two. 
                  When the smoke clears, all he has won is what he had coming — 
                  no more, no less.
                  
                  The 
                  expert has a totally different perspective. He is able to win 
                  tricks with small cards that his less experienced counterparts 
                  never noticed. He appreciates long suits and their ability to 
                  produce extra tricks. Any schmoe can win tricks with aces and 
                  kings; the expert finds it aesthetically more pleasing to win 
                  tricks with twos and threes.
                  
                  ...
                  
                  
                  
                  Finesses Do Have Their Day in the Sun
                  
                  
                  Although forgoing a finesse is often the correct play, at 
                  times a finesse is necessary:
                  
                  
                  1.    
                  When there is no alternative;
                  
                  
                  2.    
                  When the finesse is odds on based on the bidding or 
                  early play;
                  
                  3.    
                  When the finesse offers the best chance to develop the key 
                  suit.
                  
                  ...
                  
                  
                  
                  How Low Can You Go?
                  
                  
                  
                  “One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at 
                  playing atrocious contracts.”
                   
                  
                  
                  
                  Alfred Sheinwold
                  
                  
                  Everybody knows how to finesse with AQ opposite 43. But that 
                  is just the tip of the iceberg. It is possible to finesse 
                  against virtually any card.
                  
                  ...
                  
                  
                CHAPTER 14 - 
                TRUMPS ARE WILD                                                  
                121