Pseudo-squeeze
Encyclopedia
Pseudo-squeeze is a type of deceptive play in contract bridge
Contract bridge
Contract bridge, usually known simply as bridge, is a trick-taking card game using a standard deck of 52 playing cards played by four players in two competing partnerships with partners sitting opposite each other around a small table...

. The declarer goes through the motions of a squeeze
Squeeze play (bridge)
A squeeze play is a type of play late in the hand of contract bridge and other trick-taking game in which the play of a card forces an opponent to discard a card that gives up one or more tricks. The discarded card may be either a winner or a card needed to protect a winner...

 where none actually exists, simulating a genuine squeeze in the hope that a defender misreads the position and therefore misdefends. If a defender is knowledgeable enough to recognize the possibility of a squeezed position, a pseudo-squeeze gives him a chance to go wrong,

For example, consider the simple legitimate positional squeeze:
The A is led from dummy in the following position, and East is genuinely squeezed between hearts and spades—if he throws away the A, declarer discards the J from hand, plays hearts and makes the K and the A. If he throws away one of the spades, South discards the K, plays spades, and again makes the two remaining tricks.
Now consider the following layout:
Now, seeing all the cards it is obvious that on the play of the A East can safely throw a spade, as his partner still guards South's 2 menace. However, he cannot see declarer's hand and if he throws the A, then he has been pseudo-squeezed.

Similarly, the position could have been:
Now, if East throws a spade on the A, South makes the rest of the tricks.
Defenders can sometimes avoid being taken in by pseudo-squeezes if they count and signal
Signal (bridge)
In the card game of contract bridge, partners defending against a contract may play particular cards in a manner which gives a signal or coded meaning to guide their subsequent card play; also referred to as carding.-Standard signals:...

 accurately. Many times, however, the position is simply too difficult. Consider this layout, constructed by Clyde Love :
South plays 7NT and West leads the J. As a genuine threat, North's diamonds are useless because they cannot be run, South has no diamond entry to support a genuine squeeze, and three diamond tricks only are no help. South has 13 tricks if the clubs break 3-2, but what if they break 4-1? In that case, only a club discard from length will help.

So South cashes the hearts and then the K, A and Q. It cannot hurt to cut the link between the North and South hands because, as noted, North's diamonds are useless.

But East has a real problem on the sixth major suit trick, because the position makes East believe that he is squeezed. South "obviously" has at least one diamond because he didn't cash diamonds when the lead was in dummy with the K. So, East thinks he must keep his diamonds and hope that West can help guard the clubs, but as soon as East discards a club South has 13 tricks. As Love states, "It would take an imbecile or a genius to discard a diamond!" Notice that neither counting nor a defensive signal can help East here – the crucial decision comes too early.

Here is a pseudo-squeeze by Victor Mollo
Victor Mollo
Victor Mollo was a British bridge journalist and writer. He is most famous for his "Bridge in the Menagerie" series of books, depicting vivid characters of bridge players with animal names through a series of exciting and entertaining deals, bridge fables of a sort.-Biography:Mollo was born in St....

:

The players were the Hideous Hog (South), Papa the Greek (West) and Molly the Mule (East).

Against the Hog's 6 Papa led the K. With only one winner in dummy to take care of three losers in hand, the Hog went for the swindle. He won the A and ran his clubs, stranding dummy's K in the process. Both Papa and Molly thought that the Hog had Ax in his hand – with the bare A, the Hog would have cashed the diamond tops before cutting himself off from dummy.

The position with six cards left was:

When the Hog led his final club, Papa thought that he had to keep two diamonds. If he came down to the 9, the Hog would cash his A and lead toward dummy's KJ. Papa would show out and the Hog would drop Molly's Q. Papa could not throw a spade, because that would allow the Hog to establish a small spade as his twelfth trick. So Papa threw the 4. Papa was pseudo-squeezed.

Then Molly chose to throw the 9 in order to retain her diamond guard. She was pseudo-squeezed as well, although earlier she had relied on Papa to keep the Jx, so that she could eventually unblock under the A. The Hog cashed the A and A and threw Molly in with a heart to lead up to the KJ.

Memory Squeeze

A memory squeeze is a sub-class of Pseudo-squeeze where the declarer plays hoping that an opponent has forgotten (or not been paying attention) to the exact cards of a suit. The most basic example:

Declarer leads the 3. East realizes that declarer has the last heart, but has not been paying attention (or forgotten) which heart declarer has. If it is the 2, the lead for the last trick will be in dummy and East must keep the Ace. If it is anything else, declarer will overtake and win the trick, so East must keep the Ace. Declarer is playing for East to have forgotten and guess wrong.
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