Edit: OK, I now see how restricted choice plays a role in a spade lead from four cards. Holding 4=4=4=1 he might have led a heart instead of a spade, holding 4=3=4=2 he would lead a spade, except if the diamonds were something like KQJx.. So restricted choice says that the lead of a spade from a four card holding is evidence for a doubleton club. It's not just a matter of counting possible hands, we must also consider that a spade was led instead of a heart. The reason may well be that he has only three hearts.
This is in the "he is known to have four spades" situation, I started off looking only at the "known to have five spades" case.I still believe RC, or Monty Hall, or whatever you wish to call it, does not apply in the fivee card case.
Quote
The only place where the article mentions Restricted Choice is in the discussion of when LHO leads a four-card suit. "In theory, he can't have five of either suit and, by restricted choice, he is less likely than normal to have four." What's wrong with that?
Well,his title refers to Monty Hall, which is the classical example of restricted choice. My own history with this is: I was at a restaurant when a former student came up and gave me the Monty Hall problem This was back shortly after the Ask Marilyn article appeared in Parade. He explained it carefully, I thought for a bit, and said "The answer is 2/3, this is just like a problem in bridge where it is referred to as restricted choice"
A couple more points.
I had not gotten as far as Adam. And here is where restricted choice type arguments really have a role. If he led a four card suit, and if we can safely (for the purpose of the problem) infer from this that he has no five card suit, then indeed he is unlikely to have a stiff club.One can reason that he then might have led one of his other four card suits, or more simply (and preferably imo) simply reason that two clubs and 4-4-3 in the other suits can happen in more ways than one club and 4-4-4 in the other suits. This is because two clubs opens up the possibility of 4=4=3=2, or 4=3=4=2. And really we should just count leading from four spades as leading from a four card major.
It seems to me that one can (again for purposes of analysis) think of the situation as equivalent to the following: INstead of W leading, the game goes as follows. Before a card is led, dummy comes down. Declarer plays a club to the board and a club back, and sees three spot cards. Before he plays from hand, he gets to ask W "Do you hold at least one five card suit?" and W will answer truthfully. Basically, as I read the problem, that's what happens. At crunch time, declare knows the answer to this hypothetical question, and knows nothing else exacept that if declarer has a five card suit, one of those suits is spades.
Now again Adam observes that the choice between two five card suits is not random. Correct. Unlike the usual restricted choice situation, I think this situation is way too loaded with unlikely hypotheticals to be very useful.
One further thought occurs to me: With no information at all to go on, we play for the drop. But if knowledge that W has no five card suit makes it more likely that we should play for the drop, then knowledge that he has a five card suit makes it less likely we should play for the drop. The books have to balance here.The initial prbability of Qx in W's hand is the sum of the probability of Qx when holding five times the probability that he has at least one five card suit and the probability he has Qx when not holding five times the probability of no five card suit. If the probability of Qx when he has no five card suit is less than the initial probability of Qx, then the other has to be more.It takes more effort than i have expended to figure out how much more.
I realize I have phrased the above rather badly, but the point is that the books have to balance.
Bottom line: Play from the drop if the original lead was from four, finesse if it was from five. Which is pretty much what anyone would do, I think.