HighLow21, on 2012-February-16, 21:14, said:
It's a good article; I wouldn't have credited the 'mistake' either way, as this is a case where the par is essentially 3NT+1/2 or 4S+1 in my book. Play for a fairly irrelevant overtrick would, at worst, result in me counting a 1-IMP mistake, and in most cases I didn't even bother.
What surprises me about the article, in all honesty, is that in spite of the bidding and the play, you still have high esteem for declarer. He's playing at IMPs, so risking 13 to make 2 in a fairly normal contract sounds ridiculous to me.
It depends. If you think that you would be right 9/10 times, going for the overtricks has positive effect of .5 imps on this hand over the long run
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It's not matchpoints. Playing on spades first is a clear mistake in my mind, and finessing the J♠ on the second round is even worse. If LHO showed out on the 2nd round of spades and the minors behave badly, he can now go down by way of 2 spades, a club, A diamonds, and a long diamond.
I don't think this is right. There isn't the tempo to get the long diamond - though maybe the defense can screw up the transportation on the hand if they duck enough stuff. - lets see, 1 diamond, 3 clubs, 2 spades, 3 hearts on any defense. nope, can't be set on this line of play, we don't have enough tempos.
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He is ice cold for 10 tricks by knocking out A♦, winning the return, and giving up a trick to the K♣. 2♠ + 3♥ + 2♦ + 3♣ = 10. And if RHO (you) ever leads a major he has 11.
But again, in my analysis no mistakes would be credited because a cold contract wasn't dropped on the floor and par (one of a few reasonable ones) was reached.
She's cold on any line at the point she attacks spades. Except the one she took, but that might have been a calculated risk.
Actually, I have no idea whether this person was brilliant or stupid in the endgame - it was later pointed out to me that this was not someone whom you would necessarily expect that level of thought. The point of the article wasn't really to make that determination - it was to open people's eyes that criticizing opponents "mistakes" might really just show how much better your opponent is than you (not you, tate, but you the ubiquitous critic), because they have seen something that makes their line stand out.