Posted 2020-September-28, 15:38
This is an interesting hand, for reasons that no-one has yet commented upon.
East passed in 3rd seat. Yes, he’s red, but so are we. Most top players, and many not-top players, would open 3C with AKJxxx and an unbalanced hand, especially short in a major.
Therefore, subject to the topic of what one should lead from Qxx, I think there is a powerful inference that, unless east is known to be ultra-conservative, he does not hold a stiff heart. We’ll get back to what that means, for our play at trick 3, in a moment.
As for the lead issue, with all respect to Mr. Silverstone, I think he’s wrong. More importantly, I think that few players would agree with him, even if he were, in theory, correct.Of course, at the table I’d ask west whether they have an agreement, but would expect to hear....no.
Firstly, count is more likely to be important than making sure partner knows we do or do not have the Queen.
Secondly, the times when his knowing where the Queen is located is important are extremely rare.
Consider: the King must be in dummy. Often it won’t be.
Secondly, losing to declarer’s short Queen has to cost the contract....remember, this is imps. If we pop the Ace, and declarer has Qx, we’ve given him an unnecessary winner. If we pop the Ace and drop his stiff Queen, the King is now a winner. Thus it matters only when playing the Jack (or 10 from AJ10xx) means we don’t ever get a club trick and that, had we played the Ace, setting up a club trick for declarer did him no good.
Good luck waiting for that parlay to happen.
So, back to clubs being 2=6.
When does a high ruff win?
When west has specifically Jx or stiff Jack. Btw, while the odds of west being void in hearts are vanishingly low, either ruff wins so I won’t consider that further.
When does the 10 win? East has specifically Jxx.
That’s it.....
So the question becomes whether east’s Jxx is more likely than xx or xxx in his hand (giving west J or Jx).
Just within th3 heart suit, the odds are 4-3 in favour of ruffing high.
But there’s more.
We are missing 4 hearts, 6 spades and 8 diamonds. Assuming east is some 6322, which suit is least likely to be the tripleton? Hearts, and by a wide margin.
The most likely split in hearts is 2-2, if east has AKJxxx in clubs, and is not ultra-conservative. Therefore, to me, unless my inferences are founded on premises that should be seen, at the table, as unwarranted, ruffing with the 10 was an error.
I don’t care how good South is. The best players in the world, absent self-kibitzing, make mistakes....more than most non-experts realize because the mistakes are subtle and involve factors, or failure to consider factors, to which most players are oblivious. As one example, I’ve played enough bridge that I am morally certain that I’ve missed chances for esoteric squeezes simply because I’m not good enough to recognize them. For me, that’s not really a mistake, but for a true WC player it might be....and only WC players would even see that an opportunity was missed.
Anyway, my point is that a great player can get these wrong, or take a losing view, without that detracting from his or her properly recognized WC status.
Now, my premises may be flawed. Indeed, if west were known to lead Q from Qxx, or even thought to quite possibly have done so, all of the forgoing falls away, since nobody preempts red on AKJxx.
Now the 10 is, imo, best, since it caters to Jxx in West, which is slightly more likely than Jxx in east (who has 8 non-clubs to west’s 10 non-clubs)
I apologize for the length of the post🙃
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari