Cyberyeti, on 2012-March-22, 12:59, said:
Say you divest yourself of K♣, and trick 2 is 9♣-> J, then trick 3 is J♠-K-A-3, now what ?
Btw, S dealt, there was no pass first.
After having spent some time on this frustrating deal I conclude: There is no good solution.
There are numerous ways of playing the hand. I see at least half a dozen.
All of them winning against some layouts and losing against others.
Evaluating which one of them has the best chance of success would require hours of computation and sometimes depend on the skill of the defenders.
It all depends how the majors are breaking, who has the
♠T and who has the
♦A and whether the
♥J will drop.
I am not convinced that creating an additional entry to dummy is really helpful here and compensates for the communication you give the defenders in the club suit.
Also if West has the diamond ace the unblock of the
♣K may induce a good East to switch to diamonds. This switch now looks attractive.
You are then reduced to playing for 4 heart tricks and East for the doubleton ten of spades.
If I unblocked the club king I would do that only if I assumed the diamond ace to be with East.
In this case I certainly lead a diamond, not a spade from dummy. The spades can wait.
Assuming the diamond is won in hand, I then would cash the 2 top hearts from hand and exit in clubs.
If West cashes his fourth club I discard a diamond from dummy and a spade from hand.
East is likely to come under pressure now and has no good discard.
Rainer Herrmann