jallerton, on 2015-February-11, 17:31, said:
If you cash two rounds of spades, both defenders follow upwards. They play standard signals, but should they signal honest count in this situation?
A significant minority plays 5-card majors. Even without that knowledge, I think you are right to consider that other declarers may be favoured by a heart lead - some opening leaders may choose a heart lead (if holding heart length) even when the opening bid was 1♥.
It's not thread-jacking if you are explaining how you'll play the hand given in the opening post! If West plays the Q from Q10x and you duck, a really alert East might guess what you are up to and overtake.
I thought and still think that this is a fascinating hand. I have, however, reconsidered my line of play...I had been writing my first post before you posted that the lead was the diamond 10, even tho I posted some time after you wrote that.
I think it important, once we know at trick one that the diamonds run, to win the A and play a club immediately...not at the speed of light, because we want LHO to have time to think, but just in normal tempo.
He cannot know how many clubs we hold, tho he can infer that we hold the diamond Q he may not be able to infer it is doubleton if we don't allow East to play a second one. On rethinking, it is possible that the auction may have allowed him to infer this, but I won't change what follows, written before I came back to write this sentence.
So West may have to consider xx or xxx in our hand in clubs, and he'll know that we still have a diamond entry, as will east.
what follows may be hazardous to one's mental health
Consider AJ9xx in dummy and declarer with, for simplicity, xx.
We learn early on to play low to the 9, catering to H10x onside, which is twice as likely as KQx.
Then as defender we look at H10x, especially if dummy has no easily used entry, and realize that if we put up the H, declarer has an issue when he has only xx. No matter what he does, he cannot pick up the suit for only one loser if dummy lacks a side entry...we have killed the suit. Even if dummy has an entry, declarer has to win the Ace and then use another entry to cross to his hand to lead low to the J9xx, intending to insert the 9. Compared to ducking, inserting the H from H10x at worst causes declarer to use entries in a different sequence than he was intending, and sometimes he can't afford to use them at all.
Ok, so as a defender we always pop with H from H10x?
Well, if we do that, and on a given hand we play low.....declarer, if alert to our habits, 'knows' we don't have H10x, so since the only other relevant holdings include KQx, he puts in the Jack.
That means that we shouldn't always play the H from H10x...we should mix up our strategy.
What about KQx? Normally we'd play low, since declarer will insert the 9...but will he? H10x is twice as likely as KQx, so whether he should play the 9 or the J depends on how we mix our plays with H10x. If we usually play low from that, then he puts in the Jack. If we usually play H from H10x, he puts in the 9....but what if once in a while we play the K or the Q from KQx? A play that usually means H10x?
Now, he plays us for H10x, wins the Ace, crosses to his hand and leads towards the J9xx, intending to insert the 10....except that partner had 10xx to start with, and we split from KQx, not H10x.
Of course, when we hold KQx, our choice of H to play generates a restricted choice analysis
I am not going to take us further down the rabbit hole by discussing AJ9xxx opposite xx or AJ9xx opposite xxx.
As for your last point, yes, an alert East may overtake his partner's Q. That is relatively unlikely, since for that to arise, LHO had to hold Q10x and play the H (many players aren't capable of that, but if this one was, then the chances are that his or her partner is also able to recognize the need for the K), but RHO has to be not only capable of the play but att able to do it....and have a heart suit that makes a shift effective.
As for what I'd do then...hmmmm....given what you wrote about 5 card major prevalence, I think that playing safe here (duck the first heart if an honour, cover the second) is trying to preserve about a 30% - 40% board. If I pop the K and it is wrong, it is costing me about 30-40% of a board, while if I pop and it is right, I am getting a 100% top.
So I'd need to think about whether a zero is going to hurt, compared to a 35% board, more than a top would improve a 35% board, and then think about the opps and how likely is it that rho, in this situation, would shift to a heart honour when holding the A.
IOW, I'd need to be at the table, and even then it would likely depend on my mood.
This is why I play a 5 card major system, of course....I never get to this situation
I already got my 60% board on the heart lead.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
MP Pairs.
Playing 4-card majors, South opens 1♥ and gets to 3NT on an uncontested auction. West leads ♦10.
What's the best line of play?