This was a well-defended hand in both rooms in the Brighton Mixed Pivot teams yesterday, won by Bletchley Park, just ahead of Hut 6. The event was marred by a world-record 38 PPs over the 57 tables in play, for breaches of Law 7C on one board, the one above.
Prof Dr Peter Hilton, whose main claim to fame was composing the 51-letter palindrome, "Doc note, I dissent. A fast never prevents a fatness. I diet on cod", also excels at the 52-card game, and was partnering Peggy Erskine-Tulloch.
He picked up his hand, bottom card first, and saw: 2♦ 4♥ J♥ 7♠ 6♠ T♠ 9♦ 3♣ J♦ 8♣ J♣ K♣ K♦. He reasoned that the previous person had not shuffled the hand after playing it, as he had found was the case with 39% of people at Brighton, including, from his own observations, West at table 7, from where the boards came. He thought that a diamond lead had lost, and thefore declarer had the queen or partner would have won and continued the suit with declarer ducking. Now declarer had won seven major suit tricks on which his hand had discarded the nine of diamonds and the three of clubs, and the defence had won the last four. He therefore led a club, and this turned out to be successful.
However the board was flattened by Sir Stuart Milner-Barry, for Hut 6, partnering Alan Turing.
He picked up 3♣ J♣ K♣ 8♣ 6♠ 4♥ J♥ 2♦ 7♠ T♠ 9♦ J♦ K♦ and it was clear that the defence had begun with four rounds of clubs, and the defence had won the king of diamonds at trick 13. He also led a club and the board was flat.
How do you rule, and what action do you take?