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dicklont

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I'm going with the passive heart. Our side isn't getting any ruffs anyway. Let him quietly go down one or two leading stuff out of his hand rather than me taking a finesse for him.

 

I am fully prepared to be very wrong - there are hands where the attacking D or S lead is needed, but I'm speculating they are outnumbered by the hands where 4 dies of natural causes.

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A diamond and I hate everything else. I also agree with a heart being the last choice. Being on lead is a powerful weapon for the defence and you should take every advantage from it as it gives you tempo. A trump lead after this auction just gives that up and you don't let declarer exhaust any entries in dummy if he wants to take a hook.
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A diamond and I hate everything else. I also agree with a heart being the last choice. Being on lead is a powerful weapon for the defence and you should take every advantage from it as it gives you tempo. A trump lead after this auction just gives that up and you don't let declarer exhaust any entries in dummy if he wants to take a hook.

Agree, jack of diamonds as best attacking choice.

 

Heart seems way too passive. Don't like spade for similar reasons. Don't like clubs because of the ace.

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enlighten me, why is a heart so awful?

Against preempts, tempo is crucial! Tempo is crucial when declarer can pitch losers in one of his short suit on dummy's winners in his other short suit. When he preempts, he often has 2 fairly short suits! In fact some like to lead aces against preempts for that reason. This is much more of a concern than giving him a free heart finesse IMO.

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[hv=d=n&n=skqjxhkxdqxcjxxxx&w=stxxhxda98xxckqtx&e=saxxhaqjtxxxdxxxc&s=sxxxhxxxdkjtcaxxx]399|300|Scoring: IMP[/hv]

 

Both tables lead A.

At the other table it was less of a disaster, they played in 3.

Unlucky?

the J is just a better choice IMO in this auction as the A requires partner to hold the K while the rates to work if partner has either the A or the Q

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Still club Ace for me. Well done to the successful diamond leaders.

 

Declarer had a club void, dummy had KQ, partner had diamond Q.  Are there any other possible layouts?

Sure there are.

- Declarer having a singleton club (dummy doesn't need the Q) so he now has an entry for a pitch.

- Dummy has AQ QJx(x) and declarer has 0-1 and will have sufficient entries for a ruffing finesse and also get back to dummy for a pitch.

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I think the point is not that nearly 60% of the time partner has one or diamond honours. The point is that nearly 40% of the relevant times a diamond lead gives the contract at trick one.

 

On this auction and at this vulnerability I expect declarer to have an 'optimistic' eight plus tricks (eg AK to seven and A(Q) outside.

 

That's why people play Ace of clubs to look at dummy and see a signal, and I would rather play a spade or a heart than a diamond if I wasn't allowed to play Ace of clubs.

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I think the point is not that nearly 60% of the time partner has one or diamond honours. The point is that nearly 40% of the relevant times a diamond lead gives the contract at trick one.

I think that 99% of the time you use percentages, you are making stuff up. Like this time, for example.

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