manudude03, on Mar 2 2010, 12:06 PM, said:
Finally someone answered what the topic was really about. I was in a bit of a rush when I posted it. I suppose the question was "How good does the alternate chance have to be to give up on RC?".
Remind me not to make example hands until I'm sure of it
. The only purer hand that came to mind was to give declarer an even stronger hand.
Dealer: | South | Vul: | ???? | Scoring: | IMP | | | |
is probably a better example of what the main point was.
I don't think there is a generic answer - you have to work each one out.
In your second example above, on a spade lead the club finesse doesn't help unless you take it at trick two. If you win in hand, cash a diamond, then cross and take the club finesse you are still down if you have to lose a diamond.
On a heart lead you can use the spade entry to play for restricted choice in diamonds and still have ten of diamonds as an entry for the club finesse later.
If we switch the ten and five of diamonds and assume a heart lead, I think it produces the scenario you were actually asking about. In that case you can cash a second diamond and use the spade entry to finesse clubs [A] or use the entry to finesse diamonds and give up on clubs [B].
A is better when QJ doubleton of diamonds are on your left regardless of clubs, approximately 0.4 * 1/6 * 1/2 = 0.0667
B is better when LHO has either singleton Q or singleton J and the club finesse is off, approximately 0.25 * 1/2 * 1/2 = 0.0625
So A is best. If they might falsecard from QJx it is even better.