pilowsky, on 2020-July-11, 20:10, said:
Ok, here's my inexpert guess. They're playing Precision. 1
♦ shows 11+ not necessarily much to do with diamonds.
The hand looks (something) like this:
West bangs down the ♦Ace, but the contract makes on any lead. At least this layout does .
1
♦ showed 4+ diamonds and I doubt East would bid 1N with four hearts.
nige1, on 2020-July-12, 01:58, said:
This is the kind of layout I was hoping for when I played the hand. And the successful (but not necessarily better - you be the judge) line, which would have worked against the very similar layout in Felicity's last example, would
not have worked against his one.
FelicityR, on 2020-July-09, 01:18, said:
The key probably for this hand is to make an assumption whether the opponent's ♠s are 2-1 or 3-0 from the outset. Or is it possible to combine both chances?
nullve, on 2020-July-09, 02:55, said:
Yes! There is a line that works both against this (IMO plausible) layout and the actual one.
To be clear, East did actually
not have three spades.
- If West has singleton ♣Q, then run ♠J unless covered.
- Otherwise cash ♣K. If West follows with ♣Q then run ♠J unless covered.
- If West has singleton ♣T then the defence can usually succeed (e.g. if West has 2 black singletons and ♥K, then he can exit in ♦s -- the ruff-sluff is useless to declarer)
- But if West has a ♠ void, (e.g. as on left) then you can ruff out ♣Q, cross to ♥A, cash your good ♣ and take the ♠ finesse.
- Otherwise hope ♠ 2-1 and either ♣ 3-3 or East is end-played