jmcw, on 2011-July-15, 08:17, said:
I would let the result stand! mainly because I think the correct play at trick 2 is a low ♠.
Free, on 2011-July-16, 04:16, said:
Declarer's play of a small
♠ at trick 2 is percentage...
It's basically his only chance.
A director shouldn't rule in favour of declarer, simply because he appreciates his card-play. Declarer's follow-up question smacks of gamesmanship even if his subsequent play is correct ...
- Without declarer's cunning follow-up question, RHO would have a sporting chance to defeat the contract. (Gnasher argues that rising with ♠K is the percentage play. Or RHO might remember that declarer refused the opportunity to cue-bid spades).
- After the question, declarer was virtually bound to succeed.
in "Right Through the Pack", playing a similar contract, declarer achieved the same coup by fanning his face with the deuce of trumps
Edit: Reading previous posts again, has sown seeds of doubt ...
Declarer might argue that ....
- The initial answer was incomplete (as has been pointed out).
- If declarer held a small singleton spade, then he would always ask a for clarification as to what defenders lead from KJT.
- Not asking could indicate a doubleton spade.
- Thus, failure to ask might tip declarer's hand, rendering the successful defence much easier.
But declarer's follow-up question is still deceptive. In this peculiar context,
do two wrongs make a right? Or should declarer just grit his teeth, and if necessary, call the director later to try to explain how the incomplete explanation caused damage.