I was wondering if there were many cases where a criss/cross was the practical play at the table.
Say we have this classical position :
We play 6NT on the ♥J lead after a 2NT opening by South.
We cash 4 clubs, 3 Hearts, and ♠AK and this is what we see :
- spades are not 5-1 ;
- Hearts are 4-3 ;
- West discards the 13th Heart and Diamonds ;
- East discards Diamonds.
Oppos are expert and they discard "aequo animo".
Now the choices are :
Choice 1- Cash the ♣Ace discarding the ♦3 and guess if somebody was squeezed (criss/cross option) ;
Choice 2- Cash the ♠Queen checking first the Spades, and fall back on the imperfect squeeze if West holds 4 Spades.
Double dummy, the criss/cross is of course the right play.
Single dummy however, if nothing very interesting has appeared before trick 9, I'm really wondering if the normal line is not to play for choice 2 (you win when spades were 3-3 all the time, or when West has 4(♠)+♦K)
Any opinions about this ?
Actually, can someone provide an example + explanation where the criss-cross is the right practical line against experts when you have no deterministic ways of locating one of the menaces ?