Posted 2010-December-15, 12:48
One rule that is extremely powerful is that in these circumstances, RHO has 5+ diamonds. The initial discard is almost always from a 5 card suit and will definitely, here, not be from a 4 card suit unless we have shown shortness...even then, the pitch by a skilled defender seems odd, since he would be transferring the diamond guard to his partner, presumably already known, by RHO, to have the club guard.
If we assume that RHO is defending as would 99% of the world, then playing for a layout on which LHO has 5+ diamonds adds nothing to our chances.
Despite the huge number of assets and the relative ease of transportation, no double squeeze seems to operate.
If RHO has the red guards, then we can have a simple squeeze against him: we simply cash our black winners, pitching a heart from dummy on the last spade, and rho cannot hold 4 diamonds and Qxx in hearts as he comes down to 6 cards.
But if LHO has the heart Q, can simple squeeze him by cashing our black winners and pitching a diamond from dummy.....when we cash the diamonds, reducing to KJx in hearts opposite A10, with the club x in S, LHO cannot hold the club J and the Qxx in hearts.
But it is not a double squeeze: to squeeze RHO we have to pitch a heart from dummy before the squeeze operates, and to squeeze LHO, we pitch a diamond. Thus we have to commit to a simple squeeze against one of the opps.
It does us no good to cash the diamonds early either, since we have to pitch a heart from hand on this, and that means we can't squeeze RHO in the reds anymore.
Leaving aside, for the moment, the club to the 9 option, and playing as posted, I would cash the diamonds, pitching two clubs, then cash the spades, pitching a diamond, and then rely upon the count in the hand. I will play rho for 5 diamonds. Since I will have a complete spade and club count I will have a precise, tho probably inferential, count on hearts, and will play the long hearts for the Q.
BTW, unless rho shows only a doubleton spade, it is virtually impossible for him to hold xxxxx in hearts....and if he did, he'd almost always have pitched one on the clubs. So we can (probably) ignore Qx hearts in LHO as a possibility.
Going back, however, to the hand....I would have won the club, driven out the spade, cashed the spades to get a count and if LHO was unknown to me or known to me to be not strong, I would have played a club to the 9. The 2 from x2 or xx2 is weird...weirder than (for a bad player) 2 from Jxx2. Against anyone for whom I have respect, I would play for the count.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari