Posted 2006-December-04, 16:29
I love this hand. I got it wrong, by the way, but I had some fun replaying some of the variations in my mind.
The heart suit is interesting. What you can't do is lose the ♠ lead to RHO for a surrounding play early. If LHO wins the 1st spade, a heart lead can't hurt you. Note that if we held the ♥8 (or 7 in some layouts), the suit is frozen from the 1st lead, and it doesn't matter who we lose the lead to. With the unprotected 9 opposite the AJx, its only frozen after the suit is led from your left, but not from your right.
The fact we don't hold the ♠10 adds a bit of a wrinkle. If RHO has both the ♠AQ, we are going down, unless RHO has the ♥10 too. So the hand has an added complexity (and guess).
Kelsey had a section in Logical Bridge Play called "Placing the Lead", and I think this hand would fit in nicely. To make a better illustration, imagine the spade suit is K9x opposite JTxx. For reasons already stated (mostly by JL), if LHO wins the 1st spade, we are safe from a ♥ attack. If RHO wins and shifts to a ♥, by losing the lead to LHO, we fork him; if he continues hearts, we win and play a 3rd round for a ♠ pitch. If he exits passive with a club, we have a choice of establishing a heart or a spade for #9. Note that the initial lead of the ♠K accomplishes the opposite of what you need.
By the way, if RHO ducks the ♠A (!), all we need to do is play a ♠ back to the K.
"Phil" on BBO