Posted 2020-April-03, 05:52
If hearts break 3-1 or better the contract is guaranteed, so you should guard yourself against a 4-0 break. If west has all 4 hearts you can prevent more than 1 loser by playing towards the T in dummy twice, provided you don't cash the ace early. If east has all the missing hearts you can play for an endgame if you guess the distribution, intending to strip east down to all hearts and throwing them in on the second round (forcing them to lead away from Q6 towards AT). For this play east needs to have a 3=4=3=3 or 3=4=2=4 shape, because you need to take 10 tricks first without east ruffing (3 spades, 1 heart, 2 diamonds, 3 clubs and one ruff in south).
You can combine these chances by crossing in diamonds and leading a small heart. If east shows out you overtake and play a heart towards north, guaranteeing the contract. If east plays the 6 you duck, and either the trick holds (west showing out) or west covers (and the hearts are 3-1 or better). If east covers you cover with the king, and again either the hearts are 3-1 or you have to go for the endplay, but with east having all hearts you never had a better option than the endplay anyway. For this last scenario you cash all your winners outside hearts, ending in dummy. At this point you have a count of the clubs so you know whether to ruff a diamond (if east has 3=4=3=3) or a club (if east has 3=4=2=4), and then you play a heart to the 8 to complete the endplay.
Edit: as a response to the claims above, when missing 7 cards in a suit (spades) they will break 6-1 about 7% of the time, so 3.5% of the time with the 6-card in west. Compared to a 1/8 chance of hearts breaking 4-0 (~12%), or 6% of finding east with all the hearts. Similarly, a 6-0 club break with clubs in west (and not leading them, I may add) is very unlikely compared to the chance of a poor heart break. Without completely checking the math, I think preparing for an unfortunate heart break is the percentage play.
Lamford writes 'Lead J♠ Teams. I have been using self-isolation by working my way through the Bridge Master series. Ny partner does not think it will last long enough for me to complete the task, but I shall persevere. This was one on which I disagreed with the recommended line. How would you play? It is clear that the only potential losers are in trumps.
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In the light of the erudite analysis, perhaps declarer should win the lead with ♣A; and cross to dummy's ♦A; to lead ♥7; but then rise with ♥K no matter what RHO plays. In real life, it's hard to imagine that RHO will often play low, smoothly, from ♥ Q J 9 6 .