Posted 2008-July-31, 12:19
One quick observation -- love the agreement to have 3♦ as a limit raise of spades.
As to the play. I get heart-heart and win with the King. This itself is odd, with a doubleton heart in dummy. RHO has something in spades he does not want to lead from.
So, I play a diamond toward dummy and RHO ducks. This is really weird also.
These two plays suggest, actually, that RHO is clueless.
So, I ruff out the Ace and ruff a heart, apparently all following. RHO is known to have, I am guessing, 15-17 HCP. As there are only 18 HCP missing from our two hands, LHO has at most 3 HCP.
The lead of the Jack show one, so RHO has the club King. With the two red Aces and the known heart Queen, that's 13 of his points.
So, we do not know what is going on in spades.
However, we have a lot to get rid of in clubs. I think I'd leave the spade King on dummy at this point and play another diamond. If RHO follows (crud!), I'll pitch a club and let LHO win. On a likely club return, I'll play the spade King and then another diamond (which is established), planning to ditch another club. Or something like that.
In other words, I'll burn up as many of their spades as I can on the diamonds, pitching my club losers on those spades.
A really nice thing could happen, though. Maybe RHO has the doubleton diamond. If so, they might ruff in small. Now, I can overruff with my 10 and play spade Ace-Spade King, perhaps leaving just one spade out. Whenh I then play diamonds, they can ruff in with their last trump (ditch a club), but I still have the club Ace to get back and pitch the rest of my clubs. Heck, on that line, I might lose just one heart and one spade. Making 5!
Or, maybe RHO pitches on the diamond, and I pitch a club. I could then play the spade King and then another diamond, pitching a club no matter what happens. If RHO ruffs in, he is endplayed in clubs and will probably play another heart (if he has one). He may be stuck and have to play a spade which I win, leavintg only one spade out. I give up that small spade and claim.
It just seems that playing another diamond wins way too much, especially against poor defense.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.