You find yourself in 6
on this hand, and thank your partner warmly enough, reflecting that if you were 6241 you'd be taking the diamond finesse for an overtrick instead of in a near-hopeless position, and that while your 4
jump suggested good spades, you might have had a little something outside. The opening lead is
2, right-hand opponent playing the seven. How do you proceed?
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There are two possibilities. One is ace of clubs, club ruff high, nine of spades, king of clubs pitching a diamond, club ruff, ace of diamonds, diamond ruff. Somewhere in the middle of that you cash the ace of hearts, and you now exit with a heart, hoping that one opponent starting with KQ, KJ, or QJ of hearts (9.7%) or that an opponent with K6, K4, or K3 of hearts (9.7%) fails to unblock the king under the ace, or that East with KJxx of hearts (4.8%) fails to rise with the king.
The other is a round-suit squeeze. If you choose this line, and you think you can read the discards, you need the diamond finesse, then you can make if one opponent has any 5 or more clubs or QJ(x)(x) and four or more hearts or KQJ. The combined odds are 5.0%. You simply take the diamond finesse then cash all but one of your trumps, discarding a heart from dummy. inflicting a trump squeeze without the count. With seven cards left, an opponent holding four clubs and three hearts has had to let all his diamonds go. Now a diamond to the ace squeezes him out of a guard.
My partner chose the squeeze line, but he ducked a heart to the jack early in the play. This makes the hand easier to read, but is technically inferior in that if East had held Qxx or Jxx of clubs she could have beaten the contract by continuing hearts. As it was, she preferred to switch to a club, forcing declarer to play the trump squeeze anyway, this time with the count, instead of a simple squeeze which required no guesswork over the discards. East-West — who are the sort of opponents I don't mind going off against — generously congratulated declarer.
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