jillybean, on 2024-November-09, 22:44, said:
Here is one totally flat board. 4
♠ (14 tables) or 5
♠ (3 tables), bid by East, all making 6 for +480
After the hand, Declarer mentioned if there had been 4 trump out, this was a restricted choice play "8 or 9 married to the Queen"
Can someone please explain this?
The simple explanation is that declarer has no clue about the game
There was a ‘theory’ many years ago that said that the queen usually lies over the jack. There was actually some evidence that this was slightly more likely than not…..back in the glory days of rubber bridge…which was by far the dominant form of the game in the early decades, though almost non-existent today. When one played to a trick, the card was placed in the middle of the table….all four cards were piled together and whichever side won the trick stacked those cards in a 4 card pile. Somif a finesse of the jack lost to the queen, those two cards were usually immediately adjacent in the trick pile. Insufficient shuffling…shuffling east into playing time…would tend to keep adjacent cards together more often than is desirable…so the queen would tend, slightly, to be dealt right after the Jack.
However, there’s no logic nor merit to the 8 or 9 is married to the queen. Either he/she was joking or simply talking nonsense.
And the remark about restricted choice tends to reinforce the probability that the speaker is a fool. Restricted choice has nothing to do with this situation…zero, nada, zilch etc.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari