wanoff, on 2015-March-29, 14:53, said:
I'll go for the bog standard double with West holding the missing King.
5 rounds of diamonds pitching ♣8 and ♠9 and West will unguard a major. Cash ♣A, that major and the last diamond. Voilà.
Very good, but there is a slightly better line. You don't care who guards what, because you have entries to both side suits in both hands, turning this into a beautiful self-executing compound squeeze that can always be made as long as W has the
♣K (a virtual certainty) and you correctly read which suit W continues to guard after the last diamond. You raise your chances by cashing the
♣A before you commit, because you get to see a second discard from E.
Look at the difference between these seven-card endings. W has discarded one
♥ and one
♠, E has not discarded a major.
South to lead. On the
♣A, W discards a small
♥, E discards a small
♠. What do you lead next?
North to lead. On the
♦10, W discards a small
♥, E discards a small
♠. On the
♦9, E has to discard in front of you.
If I'm not mistaken, you can cash one winner in one double-threat suit that does not accompany the threat, but check me on this. So if you said "cash the club A, lead to one of dummy's entries and run the last diamond" I think you'd have the best line in practice if not theory.
(East drops a spade on the
♦9.)