MrAce, on 2016-October-01, 20:05, said:
As far as I know, you suggest to play ♣J/Q at trick 3 (after ♥A)
Yes.
MrAce, on 2016-October-01, 20:05, said:
Assume that it is covered and you won with ♣A (or do you duck?) Do you play 2nd club to test clubs? If not test clubs how will this help you to decide how to play diamonds? If you test and find out 3-2 , you just created a club winner for W when he hold Kxx ♦, where starting ♦ to Q would, a very realistic line, makes easy 3♦+2♠+2♣+5♥=12 tricks. Looks like you go down when 3-2 clubs and 3-3 diamonds, everything friendly. No?
Assume the ♣J/Q is not covered and held the trick, what next? Same position. You either test clubs and create 2nd trick for defense when W has ♦K and ♣K. Or you play diamonds without knowing how the club suit behaves.
Ok, I realise it sounded like I wanted to find out everything about the club suit before playing on diamonds, but that wasn't the idea. Sorry.
The idea was rather that even partial information about the club suit, e.g. about who has the K, might be useful when handling the diamond suit.
For instance, suppose the
♣Q/J is not covered. Then it makes sense to switch to a "diamonds first" line of the kind that others have suggested, except that one's handling of the diamond suit might be influenced by whether RHO follows suit.
And suppose the
♣Q/J is covered, which seems to be the critical variaton for my line. Then it might be relevant whether
i) RHO shows out (indicating diamond length)
ii) RHO follows suit with the 8,9 or T (Grosvenor from
♣T98x, so suggesting a (32) or 41 club break and therefore diamond length with RHO rather than with LHO).
iii) RHO follows suit with the only spot below the 8 (not revealing much about how clubs break, except that RHO might have chosen to Grosvenor with T98x)
I'm not sure what's best in each case (and I must admit I haven't thought much about it), but I can think of two natural sublines:
1) [cases i) and ii) primarily] Play the
♦J from dummy at trick 4, both with a view to finessing diamonds twice and as a smothering play against LHO, since RHO is the opp most likely to have diamond length. But if RHO covers and the 8 or T doesn't appear from LHO, it might be best to duck a club at trick 5 in ii) or iii).
2) [cases ii) and iii only] Play a diamond towards the Q, intending to duck a club if it holds the trick. Then if clubs are (32), I'm home. If clubs are 14, East will again be squeezed in the minor suits provided he also has the
♦K (seems likely).