phil_20686, on 2012-March-30, 13:11, said:
I mean it seems to me that playing the compound squeeze is assuming that you are going to be able to read the position, but I am just not that convinced. It seems obvious to me that if the the defence discards optimally you will have a pure guess.
Obviously the defence will probably not defend optimally, but in that case you will have to guess in what way they are going wrong in order to improve your chances above a guess.
Waynes line works when its Qxx spade, or when east has the spade Q and the club Q, or when west has the diamond and the club. Those seem like pretty good odds to stack up against reading the black suit position.
I used to think like this. I'd assume that the defenders would work out what my problem was, then cunningly conspire to conceal their hands from me. I'd think that someone with 5-3 in two suits would work out that he could afford either of them, and make a random selection between the two without giving anything away. If someone made their first discard without much sign of thought, I'd assume that they'd just planned it all in advance. If someone's first discard turned out to be from a 3-card suit, I'd worry that he might have done it from Qxx to fool me. I'd assume that they could do all of this without signalling to each other. Then I'd pick a line where I didn't have any scope for card-reading, because it also meant I didn't have any scope for messing it up.
Anyway, I've got over that now. Early in the hand, it's hard for a defender to work out what the exact layout is. Most people, even top-class players, make the easy discards first, so that they can delay the difficult decisions until they have more information. Most people make easy discards quickly and happily, but difficult discards more slowly. Most people signal to each other. And, most of all, outthinking the opponents is more fun than mechanically playing a routine double squeeze
So, as I said, I'd cash an extra trump and see what happened. By that stage I'd hope to have some idea of the layout. If I did, I'd play for the compound squeeze; otherwise I'd play for the double squeeze.