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A play at home plate is possible. [1] In a suicide squeeze, the runner takes off as soon as the pitcher begins the windup to throw the pitch, and before releasing the ball. [1] If properly executed, and the batter bunts the ball nearly anywhere in fair territory on the ground, a play at home plate is extremely unlikely. [3]
N W E S ♠ ♥ A ♥ Q J 10 ♦ — ♦ ♣ — ♣ — South to lead ♠ 4 ♥ 2 ♦ — ♣ A South needs all three remaining tricks in a notrump contract. South leads the squeeze card, the ♣ A, and West is squeezed in hearts and spades. If West discards the ♥ A, North's ♥ K becomes a winner. If West discards either spade, North's ♠ J becomes a winner. Note the following features of ...
The idea of Squeeze Play! came from a suggestion that Kaufman and Herz should make a movie about a women's softball team and their amorous adventures. Kaufman added the comedy element, and along with his brother Charles and screenwriter Haim Pekelis, a 75-page screenplay was finally worked out; the Kaufmans provided the ideas for sight gags and jokes, and Pekelis worked out the plot.
Squeeze Play, a 1956 album by John Serry, Sr; Squeeze Play!, a 1979 comedy film "Squeeze Play" (song), by Snoop Dogg; Squeeze Play (The Price Is Right), a segment game from The Price Is Right; Squeeze Play, a 1990 baseball novel by Jane Leavy; Squeeze Play, a 1982 novel by Paul Auster (writing as Paul Benjamin)
The Vienna coup is an unblocking technique in contract bridge made in preparation for a squeeze play. [1] It is so named because it was originally published by James Clay (1804-1873) after observing it being executed in the days of whist by "the greatest player in Vienna" — identity unknown. [2]
safety play; applying the principle of restricted choice; applying the theory of vacant places; applying percentages and probabilities; Techniques by defenders.
1981: Squeeze Books (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.),150p., ISBN 978-1-58776-146-1; Test Your Bridge Play: Volume 2, 100 Declarer-Play Problems Designed to Improve Card Playing Techniques for Bridge Players Who Are Sick and Tired of Going Down in Cold Contracts: 1981: Wilshire Book Company (North Hollywood, CA), 234p., ISBN 978-0-87980-390-2
A single-suit squeeze is a unique squeeze play in contract bridge that occurs with an awkward defensive distribution of one suit. It contains elements of a squeeze and a throw-in. [1] It is a kind of immaterial squeeze, in which a discard does not cost a trick directly, but gives up a position, allowing the opponents to adopt a winning line.