Here's the entire hand:
At the time, here was my reasoning: Pard is marked with a doubleton club (otherwise he leads his stiff) and 5 spades. Declarer has exactly six hearts (otherwise he jumps to 4 hearts over 2
♣).
A rebid of 3
♥ (versus 4) over 2N is intriguing. Either the hand really needs something in hearts or its interested in 3N. I can't tell which. Further, trying to read too much into this call might just be noise.
I also placed declarer with a pretty good hand. Otherwise, the hand just rebids 3
♥ over 2
♣. Frankly, I think that's what the actual hand calls for; I think forcing to game on a non-fitting 11 is a bit of an overbid. However, they are vul, so its reasonable.
Whats the spade situation? I think its somewhat dependent on the club situation. For instance, if declarer has the stiff
♣K, wouldn't it make more sense to fly with the
♠A, and try to take diamond pitches right away, and ruff a spade later?
At the table, I constructed Qxx, AKQxxx, Qxx, x in less time than it takes to type this and shifted to Arend's 8
♦. Declarer ducked to the J. Pard now made a really cute (bad?) play. He shifted to a low club (!). Maybe he couldn't read my 8-spot, I don't know. Declarer rose with the A, and lost a ruffing finesse for -2.
At the other table, they just cashed the
♦AK and took their heart trick for -1.
Some of the comments I find very enlightening, and have caused me to somewhat rethink this hand. Here's what I think now:
1. Pard can still have a stiff club, but only if he has a trump trick. Pard still might lead the stiff K
♣, with the suit rebid on his left.
2. I love Justin's comment about Declarer not rising with the Q
♦. Dead on! It is insulting to me that I led small diamond away from A (K) J8(x). By rising with the Queen he now makes an unmakeable contract.
3. Mike gives some interesting alternate constructions. I wouldn't have considered a club ruff, although pard probably bids a sandwich NT with a lot of 5=3=5=0's and declarer rebids clubs over 2N with 3=6=1=3. I know my opponents system well enough that 2
♦ doesn't promise 6 hearts.
4. An interesting side problem is what does is the best call over 2N with Qxx, AKQxxx, Qxx, x? I'd probably rebid 3N myself. So the fact that pard probably has a trump trick might be reason alone to bang down the
♦AK.
Overall, I love this problem.