Posted 2020-July-01, 05:20
My simulation, published on Bridgewinners, strongly suggests that the king of clubs is a country mile ahead of the alternatives. What I wrote there, for convenience:
I don't think that factors such as the possible match score, which is a movable feast, or the no-trump range in the other room, makes much difference. I was interested in this from a bridge point of view, and will leave the discussions of the Greek alphabet to people far more intelligent than me. So, I dealt 100 hands using Bridge Analyser and the following parameters.
a) they have at least nine hearts
b) the opener has 16-17
c) the responder has 7-10 (I don't think he is limited to this, but we are not likely to beat it if he has more)
d) partner has 0-4 points in diamonds
e) both sides play double dummy (not ideal, but a lot easier than plodding through).
Forrester once wrote (I tried to find it online but could not) in maybe his book for Batsford, which I edited, that one should play partner for a single card if that will usually beat the contract, or secondly for two specific cards is that will usually beat the contract. Here, if the ace of hearts is with the no-trump bidder, which occurred on 64% of hands, then you usually only need partner to have the ace of clubs to beat it. He only has about a seven count, so that is not so likely, but given that he doesn't have much in diamonds, he is around 11% to have the ace of clubs with the ace of hearts with declarer. But the other big way that the king of clubs wins is when partner has the queen of clubs and a pointed suit ace (more often in spades). This occurred in a further 8% of hands. Not a great result, but the alternative lead needs a huge amount as well. Declarer may well have a heart loser, and may well take a losing club finesse, and partner may well have a pointed suit ace, but you are peering over the horizon to find the other trick. You beat it 19% of the time with the king of clubs lead, 4% with any other lead. A small sample, but that is my lot! And declarer will guess the hand perfectly on other leads, so the double dummy definitely biases the test a bit, I have to admit. And when I checked some more there were a further 5% of hands on which I could also switch to the king of clubs after winning a heart trick, which improved the passive lead further.
My research convinced me that not only was the king of clubs the right lead, but, at IMPs, the alternatives were just hopeless. I am interested to learn what was right. I will certainly be leading the king of clubs on similar hands in future.
I have since learned that the king of clubs was the only winning lead. Partner has the queen of clubs and the ace of spades. But one swallow does not make a summer, as the interviewer said to Monica Lewinsky applying for a job as an accounts clerk.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar
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I rank
1. ♠J = Safe-looking.
2. ♥8 = Might pick up partner's ♥J.
3. ♦3 = Might work. Partner is unlikely to double dummy's ♦ bids even with ♦ATx or ♦AQx.
4. ♣K = Enterprising. Great if it works.