winkle, on 2014-April-16, 15:55, said:
I think you're right. If you drop Barry Rigal a note maybe he'll fix it for the third edition.
As a side note, as much as I like Clyde Love's squeeze book, the RFL acronym never worked for me. I understand the "Right, Free, Left", but which way is left?? Left of the single threat hand, ok, but that's just not intuitive to me. The way I would work it out nowadays is that the last free winner will squeeze the hand opposite. To avoid that I need to squeeze the hand over the free winner first, which means I need to cash his partner's winners. Whatever, I'm sure this only makes sense to myself and no one else.
Right and Left is always from the position of the hand, which holds the B threat, that is the threat held by both defenders, sometimes also called the common threat.
The common threat here is spades and therefor our perspective must be the one from North position. So the right threat is diamonds and the left threat is clubs.
THe RFL terminology is very useful, because once you identify the common threat if you can follow the RFL order, the squeeze will work.
Sometimes a simple squeeze is played as a double squeeze.
This usually occurs if you do not know, which defender controls a threat. but you have a single threat against each opponent and one threat which might be controlled by either opponent.
You do not care who controls the common threat if you can play a double squeeze instead.
With regard to the original position:
In the above position you do not know whether clubs break and only if the clubs do not break does a double squeeze position exist.
But this is not something, which requires a correction in the book. This is rather typical for many squeeze positions:
You have to make assumptions about the actual layout of the defenders hands.
If you misguess you go down.
Assume
Now East discards a club and if declarer assumes East has given up clubs he will go down.
So a slight improvement is to cash exactly one top club before playing the hearts. This will still preserve the RFL order.
Rainer Herrmann
Lovera, on 2014-May-29, 08:14, said:
With West holding ♦K there world be no spade-diamond simple squeeze ,for lack of entry (E). But it is unthinkable that West would lead away form the ♦King into South's bid :undoubtedly East has that card. If so this is a Type B2 simple-played as double squeeze with threats R: ♦-10; L:♠9; B:♥6. Just finish the Clubs.
This hand (was played by Mr.John W. Norwood Jr.) illustrates the possibility menzione in paragraph 22. Due to the presence of a competent diamond threat "in each hand " (While the dual threat, dual type possibility seems obvious enough, it hand escaped your author 's notice until was pointed out to him by Mr.Norwood in this very hand.),the squeeze may equally well be considered as Type R with threats R:♠9; L:♦J; B:♥6. But also I say with threats R: ♠9 plus Queen, B:♥2; L:♦J squeeze card ♣3 idle card ♥3 (usually this end position has squeeze card in South and idle card in North But it is the same
I made a playable graphic out of the hand to make it easier to follow the play. I am not sure what your comment at the end means. The squeeze card in all the positioned mentioned was a club in north, and the squeeze card isn't usually in south, it is where ever it might be. The two heart winners in South makes any double squeeze work easily (B2 type). Here is what you quote the author as saying and what you changed it to.. (which really seems no change)
Author:: Type R with threats R:♠9; L:♦J; B:♥6.
You: R: ♠9 plus Queen, B:♥2; L:♦J squeeze card ♣3 idle card ♥3
So you haven't cashed spade queen (why? it is ok), you threw the ♥6 under the king so you had ♥2 not ♥6, you announced the last club as the squeeze card, nothing new there, and somehow someone's heart 3 became idle (I didn't look at EW hands, so not sure has it and don't care). So I am not sure what question you are asking or what point you are making. What did I miss?