cardsharp, on Jun 6 2005, 03:33 PM, said:
Hi Luis,
As you are a much better player than me, with experience at a higher level, I just wanted to understand what you meant by
"In a f2f expert game I'd say that the guy with Tx was trying to read some kind of trump signal from his pd."
This implies that the hesitation with a singleton is acceptable. I'd expect an expert to realise that this is a situation where a hesitation is best avoided or take the consequences.
Or, is your point that this situation is so well known that a hesitation would never deflect declarer, and so it is inconsequential? Personally I think I would struggle to win this argument at our national tournaments - perhaps you can ask David Burn next time you are commentating together for his views, as I'd be up before him for this!
Cheers
Paul
Actually the defender could have been very ethical, let me explain it in this way: If you need to think about your defensive plan in the middle of the hand then you should do it when your hesitation can't carry any information to your pd or declarer. And a very good example is:
"Situations where a defender is clearly not thinking about what card to play but about something else"
When you have nothing and declarer is leading towards KJxxx of trumps in dummy after cashing the ace then you can think in the same way you can think when there's only one card left in a suit and you are about to play it. Then it's clear you weren't thinking about your play in the suit but about something else and there's no clear information about what that was.
Declarer's guess is not affected by your hesitation since with Qx you are not going to play the Q so you are clearly -very clearly- not thinking about what card to play but about something else.
In a recent f2f tournament exactly the same thing happened, declarer called the TD and the TD asked him to explain his reasoning after West hesitation, declarer said "well he must have Qxx and is thinking if he has to play low or the Q in his 2nd turn", the TD asked if that had any logic and declarer admited it didn't. So there was no damage, declarer can play from the top or finesse no matter what the defender does in the 2nd turn, nothing changes. West was also asked and he said he was thinking if he was going to falsecard in a side suit when declarer played that from his hand and he decided it was a good time to do that.
This is clear like the water to me. There're other positions where accidentaly a defender hesitation may induce declarer to make a mistake and then we can rule that it may have been done on purpose and change the result but in this case there's no way to damage declarer, with Qx you are never putting up the Q in front of KJ.
Luis