gnasher, on Apr 12 2010, 08:03 AM, said:
Jlall, on Apr 11 2010, 07:52 PM, said:
I will say if you actually know the suit is 3-2 and you don't play for the drop when they drop the ten on the right, you're making a huge mistake against most people imo. Of course against Gnasher or Sandqvist you should hook though.
That's a flattering comparison, but I'm not sure that you're right. It's a lot easier to be a good player on the BBO forums than in real life.
I was, in fact, West, and I'm fairly sure I played my clubs in ascending order. It's almost as important for West to randomise with xxx as it is for East to randomise with 10x. OK, this might have been the 1/3 of the time that I should play the lowest two, but I'm sure that in practice I do it more often than that.
I think David Burn had my cards at the other table. It would be interesting to know whether he remembered to plays his clubs in a random order.
I have some vague recollection of the deal, but to be honest I do not remember whether I was the player with three low clubs or the player with
♣Q10. I do remember thinking at some early stage in the play that declarer would take the club finesse and go down, but I do not remember any specific attempts to avoid dissuading him from this course.
I am not sure, though, to what extent it is possible to "remember" to do something in random fashion. Human beings are particularly bad random number generators - if you ask someone to pick a number "at random" between one and ten, you will get the answer "seven" far more often than 10% of the time. If you find yourself in a position where you need to do (or appear to do) something "at random" and try to think consciously about how to do it, the chances are that you will fail.
I do have a habit of trying to work out early in the course of a defence whether I will actually need to play equals in some random order; if so, I will use some external aid such as the vulnerability on a board - NV I will play low from QJ, VUL I will play high. I recall once having to play from J109 when declarer held Axx and dummy KQ8x. Since there are six orders in which one can play those cards, I took the board number modulo 6 and selected what turned out to be the order 10-9-J. That jack fell under dummy's queen, of course, and declarer said "I knew you were trying to fool me by petering with 10-9 to show a doubleton".