Posted 2013-January-15, 07:26
One way to go easy on yourselves with assigning blame is to look at a different question: Suppose that the opening lead had been a spade. How do you plan on playing this for ten tricks? You have five spades, the AK of hearts, the Ace of Diamonds. You need two more. You are not getting any via a club ruff if they keep leading trump. So you need two from diamonds. That's a nice Jack on your left, presumably a stiff. So Diamonds can be set up. But wait, if you draw trump and attack diamonds there is a danger that they get the King and cash three clubs., So the diamonds have to be developed before trump are drawn. Well, not really. You can draw trump, enter dummy with a heart, lead the King of Diamonds forcing a cover with the King, and then if the Jack falls you can claim. A bit far fetched. Probably better: Draw two rounds of trump ending in dummy and lead the Q of diamonds. The King covers, take the Ace, lead a Diamond, working fine if W started with any doubleton. Well, not quite. He could have the Kx and the Q loses to the King. Also, if he W has three trump and a stiff Diamond spot this is not working so well.
What we have here is a borderline 4♠ that makes if you guess right or the defense helps you out.
I suppose I do bid 4♠ instead of 3♠ holding the North cards on the grounds that all of me values are valuable. But if W resists the temptation to lead his stiff, it would not surprise me if this goes down. And I don't really see how you made twelve tricks, unless the Jack was from Jx. Did East cover the Queen with the King? Given the dummy, that would be a very generous play. I would expect a low Diamond from East, after which we draw trump. Trusting that W has no more than three trump we can end on the board and start in on diamonds. E continues to play low. Eventually we play our Ace. E still holds the King and we have one entry left to dummy. Making 4, with the helpful lead.
Ken