Posted 2012-November-28, 14:03
In what universe does any opponent cover the spade J, with the 10 in dummy, when defending even a game, let alone a grandslam?
I understand the 'just in case', but I think that you are increasing your real life odds by precisely 0% against anyone we are likely to be playing in a National Knockout, even a Seniors!
As for the double, we should cash a top spade early, before running the trump, just to add the stiff spade Q to our odds, but that's unnecessary if we already know diamonds are 2=6, having tested that suit, so I am picking nits.
If we are looking for low probabilty plays, we can cater to some adverse spade lies, on the club lead, by winning, running 5 trump, cashing the diamond Q, crossing in spades, cashing the top diamonds, reducing to a 3 card position, with dummy holding J x void J and LHO maybe Qx void void Q. We lead our last diamond, to ruff in dummy, while squeezing LHO.
This needs lho to have Qxxx(x) in spades, which seems more likely than 2=6 diamonds and 2=2 trumps. It also wins if rho fails to recognize the need to hold onto, say, 8xx in spades. He has to make some discards on the trumps and may well not realize the significance of his holding.
I posted this line in my first post, but had wrongly suggested it worked on Qxx in LHO. It does, but only if rho mispitches, so I edited it away.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari