nekthen, on 2016-December-08, 05:50, said:
Similar to Journalist, strong ten is very easy. Leading a ten promises at least one higher card, excluding the J.
This seems worth consideration - along with Zelandakh's post on the variations
nekthen, on 2016-December-08, 05:50, said:
However, there is an element of the defense that you have glossed over. Why did partner continue a second club? You played the 2 on the first round, surely discouraging rather than count? Anyway you can't have the ace. So carrying on with a second club is just surrendering, while a spade switch brings home the bacon.
Aberration independent of the original problem (we never got as far as discussing this) - my 2 is effectively both - our approach is to give count when you can't cover the card from dummy - so this, in effect, discouraging showing the 8 as my highest possible card.
nekthen, on 2016-December-08, 05:50, said:
If declarer did play for the drop, which is usual, you had the opportunity to signal for a spade on the second round, the JS should get the message across. Maybe declarer was canny enough to play the finesse to deny you the opportunity to signal and lose to the less dangerous hand.
This is a good hand for Italian signals. On the club switch you can play the 8 for a spade switch. An odd card would be encouraging (though it is hard to imagine a holding that would want to), even cards are suit preference.
I'm now sure declarer finessed as I don't recall being able to signal - we've just adopted Italian discards so I would have been highly relieved and surprised to see an odd spade and an even card in both minors all available. I wondered before as I couldn't think of much reason for declarer to go against the odds but you give good enough reasons.