lamford, on 2019-April-12, 08:27, said:
West's club lead was fourth best, and East played the three of clubs, normal count. On the heart, East played the jack and West the five. In theory these would be normal count, but if you ask either opponent they would say that they usually lead and play randomly against a slam. East returned the four of clubs and West played the nine on your king. If you pitch a spade from dummy, cash the top club (West playing the jack and East the eight) pitching a spade and cross to the king of spades, the hearts will come in but you still need a twelfth trick ...
So we have reduced to a 5 card ending, lead in dummy, with: AKJ void A9 void opposite x void KJx x
We have watched the pitches, and once again we are being asked to plan the play with incomplete information. I very much doubt that in real life I would close my eyes and ignore the 2 discards each defender is required to make.
I should refuse to pick a line of play in this vacuum. What is the point of presenting these problems without this information?
I would estimate that 90% or more of the players one encounters in routine bridge will give something away here. Now the best players can see what's going on and will have taken a few seconds at, maybe, trick 3, when they can both see that hearts are 3-3. But even the best players sometimes give info away and of course sometimes the cards are such that they are toast no matter what they do.
Obviously the best line is to assume that at this point someone has a doubleton Queen: either because they always had it or because they have been squeezed. I don't think it makes sense to play spades: we have to commit to a pitch of a club or diamond on the second spade before seeing LHO's card.
I play Ace and a diamond to the K. If the Queen doesn't appear, then I lead a spade. Whether I hook or play for the drop depends on who played what on the hearts.
Note that I can't squeeze LHO in the minors, since he is pitching behind me, but I can have squeezed LHO in the blacks (the squeeze biting when I cash the 2 diamonds) and of course I can have squeezed RHO in the pointeds (and still more squeezes arise if, unexpectedly, RHO has the club guard).
Edit: on the play given, I assume East may in fact guard clubs: no matter how randomly they lead, few would lead the 5 from J1095.
In that case there is some merit to cashing spades first in that RHO can't keep the 4th club and Qxx in diamonds. However, I won't change my initial suggestion absent the missing info about their pitches on the hearts.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari