Quote
So,on reflection, the original argument reached the right conclusion, though it's not 100% clear to me if that is because it was solid, or just because it got lucky that it hadn't overlooked anything.
Imagine two worlds:
a)World A, where Q
♠ is offside
b)World B, where Q
♠ is onside
We need to maximize our payoff in both A and B but we have to make the same play in both of them.
As in world B we always score the game regardless of what we do, our considerations should focus on how to maximize the payoff in world A and in world A Q
♥ is with opening leader 2/3 of the time
Now the question is if that 2/3 shrinks enough after we add that
♦KQJ, A
♠, J
♣ is an opening bid and that with 2-1-5-5 for example 2
♦ bidder would jump to 3
♣
Interesting hand. I (I watch vugraphs from perspective of one player, card by card) got it right (or I lucked out) and Bocchi got it wrong. It would be nice to ask him if he made a mistake or saw something I don't see.
Knowing standard of Bocchi's cardplay (this guy is really something else if you ever doubt cardplay brings the most imps in bridge even at high level watch him play) I have my doubts even with such clear (!?) reasoning as presented in my OP.
As it happens in other room other world class declarer, Jacek Pszczola had similar problem. At his table the bidding went:
1
♦* dbl 3
♣** 3
♦
pass 3
♥ pass 4
♥
* - 4+
** -I don't know, probably mixed raise
He got it right. Unfortunately without knowing what 3
♣ is it's difficult to say if his task was easier or not. That hand was decisive in Mahaffey - Lavazza mach during recent Open European Championship.