Tramticket, on 2019-February-04, 08:22, said:
You can play to bring the ♠Q down in three rounds (e.g. ace of spades king of spades and ruff a spade). Quick calculation gives this as about 36%
Or you can finesse on the first round of spades and hope for any 4-3 spade break. Quick calculation gives this as about 31%
Or you can play ♠AK and if the queen doesn't drop, you take a club finesse and try to drop the king in three rounds. I haven't calculated, but seems worse.
The others playing diamonds rather than NT all went down, so I imagine they chose one of these lines.
At the table, I was trying to figure out what Q
♥ from N might mean, with AT5 in dummy. I imagined she had at least the J too and more probably 5 cards than 4, which put the K probably second in S along with a stack of black cards. So when S pitched 2 clubs I figured it might be from Txxxx and in any case suggested the Q
♠ was being protected.
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-04, 08:46, said:
Or play ♠AK and a ruff, and if this doesn't bring the spade down take the ruffing club finesse and hope it works and the 10 drops (the 2 club pitches could easily be from xxxxx).
That was my reasoning, and it worked.
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-04, 08:46, said:
Edit: this is all kinds of wrong, if the spade finesse works, both losing hearts go away, you give up a club and ruff one, for a guaranteed 12 tricks, the spade break is irrelevant
Not sure it was wrong at all.
Of course if South had discarded 2 spades it would all have been simpler and we gain an overtrick.
If he was more wily and discarded a spade and a club it gets more intricate, but with attentive play it comes home the same.