FrancesHinden, on 2010-November-15, 16:18, said:
English premier league. RHO is a very good player who has won international events, although is not quite at the Meckwell/Zia type level.
Apparently declarer is not and does not look worthy of playing in a premier league
Quote
West leads a medium-to-low spade (they lead middle from 3 low, bottom from 3 to an honour)
You win in dummy, and play a club to the ace and a heart to the jack.
With 11 tricks it would not occur to me to butcher my communications by coming to hand. The hand should always make on the simple assumption that RHO has the
♠ queen.
Playing
♥s from the top solves all your problems immediately if the queen drops. LHO is quite unlikely to bid that way at favorable vulnerability with
♥Qxxx and 3 cards in
♠. If LHO comes in after 3 rounds of
♥ and has only 3 cards in
♥, he will have a very difficult return and is likely to give you your 12th trick immediately. Even if LHO finds the return of a
♣ or (unlikely) can return a fourth
♥ there is a compound squeeze available, since East will have to keep
♠ and will have to relinquish control in one of the minors on the run of the
♥.
Quote
Problem 1: The jack of hearts holds. Now what?
Cash the
♥s. What you should have done at trick 2.
However, by coming to hand with the
♣ ace, if LHO does have Qxxx in
♥ and returns a
♣, you will have destroyed your compound squeeze. (RHO relinquishes
♦ on the run of the
♥)
Quote
Problem 2: The jack of hearts loses to the queen, and RHO plays a heart back (LHO follows). RHO turns up with a doubleton heart. Plan the rest of the play.
Play for the compound squeeze. Since this is a compound squeeze of the unrestricted type you can run all the
♥s before assessing the situation. RHO will already be squeezed on the penultimate
♥ and will have given up control of a minor. It should not be very difficult for declarer to judge which one after RHO has made another discard after the squeeze occurred.
Cash the tops of this minor, ending with the
♦ king in hand. Now cash the
♠ king to execute the double squeeze.
If you are unfamiliar with compound squeeze technique, this is a basic example to understand it. A compound squeeze culminates always in one of two different double squeezes, depending on what an opponent discards. Among others you must have a basic threat lying over this opponent, in this case it is RHO and the threat is the
♠jack.
Rainer Herrmann