Walddk, on May 28 2007, 11:26 AM, said:
This is very tough, and perhaps too tough in this forum (no offence intended). ♥K rates to be with West, but so does ♠A, and that gives you an additional chance if West has ♠A singleton or doubleton.
Win ♣K and discard a heart (spade pitch can never help). Ruff a club and lead a spade towards dummy. If West has the stiff ace, your worries are over. If he follows small and the jack holds, draw trumps and play a low spade from both hands.
West wins perforce we hope, and now we have set up two spades for heart pitches.
Finally, if this does not work, we shall have to rely on the heart finesse.
Roland
Actually, it is even tougher. If West has 3325 or 3316 with the spade ace but no heart king, a lead toward the spade jack forces a duck, and then repeated heart finesses disposes of the losing spade.
The key issue here is not to take any pitch, but to play low on the second club and ruff in hand - any pitch is premature. Ruff, then lead a spade toward the jack, which brings home the contract of LHO hold singleton spade A or rises from Ax. If the jack holds, it then is probably critical what spot card LHO played to guess whether to play for Ax or for 3/3 hearts with the king onside or to try for an endplay.
Probably the best overall plan is to play low on the second club and ruff, then lead a low spade to the Jack, then, unless LHO followed with the 9 or 10, take a spade pitch on the club King, draw two rounds of trumps, and then lead a high spade. If LHO is 2425, 2326, or 2416, he is endplayed. If he has either a spade or diamond exit, entries are sufficient to fall back on the heart finesse. If LHO follows with the 9 or 10 on the first spade, pitch a heart on the club king and duck a spade back.