lamford, on 2012-January-31, 10:40, said:
I would rule 11 tricks. It seems normal to duck a club, ruff out a spade menace, and play the pointed-suit squeeze against East, working when East has the queen of diamonds or West has queen doubleton. Spades are 5-2 and hearts 1-3, so this line seems close, and is certainly normal, though I think anti-percentage still.
Yes, I definitely agree that this line is normal for the given class of player (in fact several declarers in other matches of the league played this line).
I am more interested in figuring out the majority view on whether just playing for the drop in diamonds is normal and inhowfar this is affected by the class of player in question.
Consider some more diamond suits (assume plenty of entries in all cases)
AJxx
Kxxx
AKJT9
xx
AJxx
Kxx
On the first, I would always rule that playing for the drop is a normal line, after all it is only slightly inferior, and declarer may always have an idea (from bidding, table feel, whatever) that the queen is offside and take it. On the second, I am also inclined to rule that playing off the top is a normal line, after all if it fails you can still get 4 tricks, there may be a ruffing finesse (even if you've forgotten that you'll be out of trumps in South by then) etc.
But we can see that the third layout is a far cry from these, there is really
substantially less merit to playing for the drop. And in the layout of the original case, it's even worse.
Now, there is of course a large class of players for whom it is absolutely routine to first make sure they get the present trick, and only then consider how they will go about taking the other tricks. They will often start with the Ace. There is furthermore a substantial class off player which will usually plan ahead, but are sometimes distracted, and in a "careless" moment may start with the Ace and then say "oops".
But isn't there also a class of players for whom "careless" would not even begin to describe what a ridiculously unlikely occurence it would be for them to start with the Ace?
"One of the painful things about our time is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and understanding are filled with doubt and indecision"
-- Bertrand Russell