nullve, on 2021-May-05, 04:14, said:
Correction: Leading the ♦Q at trick 2 cannot hurt, and will actually put the maximum pressure on LHO. (The discovery play can wait.)
I agree. All discovery plays will not learn anything on the actual hand, as nobody has a doubleton or shorter, and you are forced to fall back on the diamond guess.
I think that correct game theory is to lead the queen and if it is covered, as mikeh says, to finesse the nine on the way back. It is only correct for West to duck from Kx if he sees the nine AND knows that the closed hand has four diamonds. Where suitplay and the Encyclopedia go wrong is that they assume that the defence can see all the pips and that they know that it is an 8-card fit. Rarely the case.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar
Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring:
There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
And drinking largely sobers us again. - Pope
Don't bother with Suitplay or the Encyclopedia of Card Combinations; they are both wrong.
You win the jack of clubs lead in South and lead the queen of diamonds covered, and East plays the five. Over to you.
+++++++++++++++++++++
IMO, West should always cover the ♦Q when he holds ♦Kx doubleton (in case declarer's holding is weaker e.g. ♦QJ8x). Hence, after winning ♦A, declarer should finesse ♦9 -- paying off to ♦KT doubleton with West.
Were North declarer, different considerations might apply.
Nullve's suggestion of ducking a ♣, before deciding how to continue, helps in some layouts and can hardly cost.