Phil, on 2015-July-07, 09:41, said:
Maybe I'm having a blind spot this morning, but I see nothing wrong with:
1. Duck the spade
2. Win the spade.
3-4. ♣A-Q
5. Presumably a club exit.
6. ♥K...
This seems to work fine on the actual layout, as well as ♥Ax(x) with RHO.
When we duck the first spade, the danger suit here isn't spades, its a diamond shift from LHO which threatens to set up 1♠ + 2♥ + 1♦ + 1♣. LHO could have the ♣K but its not likely he has the ♥A. As long as we drive out the ♥A/♣K before the ♥J I think we are OK.
Keeping the spade tenace is an illusion. Helgemo makes if he ducks (I think).
1. Duck the spade
2. Win the spade.
3-4. ♣A-Q
5. Presumably a club exit.
6. ♥K...
This seems to work fine on the actual layout, as well as ♥Ax(x) with RHO.
When we duck the first spade, the danger suit here isn't spades, its a diamond shift from LHO which threatens to set up 1♠ + 2♥ + 1♦ + 1♣. LHO could have the ♣K but its not likely he has the ♥A. As long as we drive out the ♥A/♣K before the ♥J I think we are OK.
Keeping the spade tenace is an illusion. Helgemo makes if he ducks (I think).
On the actual layout this is true.
Let's check on different layouts:
1. Duck the spade
2. Win the spade.
3-4. ♣A-Q
Assume West has a low singleton club and East ducks.
How do you continue?
If you continue clubs, East cashes his two club winners and plays ♥A, small heart from ♥Ax.
Nige's layout above:
If you instead switch to a high heart at trick five East wins and returns a low heart.
(Assume East has 2♠=3♥=4♦=4♣ with West holding the ♥J)
The point is not the spade tenace.
The point is that spades are very likely 5-2, in particular if clubs do not break.
In many layouts you can not afford to loose a spade trick.
The defense might get 1 spade, 2 hearts and 2 club tricks.
Rainer Herrmann