The full deal as played:
nige1, on 2018-March-11, 17:10, said:
Declarer wins ♠A and ♥AKQJ.
If East protects ♣s, he is susceptible to a compound squeeze: on the 4th ♥, East must abandon a pointed suit.
1. If East keeps fewer than 3 ♦s, then declarer cashes ♦AK discarding a ♣. Now, declarer's ♥T and ♣AKQ execute a double-squeeze. with ♠s a threat against both opponents.
2. If East keeps fewer than 2 ♠s, then declarer cashes ♠K. Now, declarer's ♥T and ♣AKQ execute a different double-squeeze with ♦s a threat against both opponents.
Yep, and I went for it. Good that GIB chose the right (for me) pointy suit (
♠), otherwise I'm one down.
Per A.Moon's book, in this position, one should cash also the last heart to fully clarify the position, since the suit that must be played next is the one that the tripled-squeezed opponent has abandoned (in the play it was obviously
♦, so it was easy). This is possible since there are 2 free cards (here the
♥) opposite the squeeze cards (what Moon calls an
unrestricted position).
lamford, on 2018-March-12, 08:10, said:
I would certainly play 7H, as I would assume the opponents were able to find the diamond lead to break up the compound squeeze or the double squeeze, as diamonds is the pivot suit. This will always defeat 7NT when both opponents guard spades and diamonds, as is very likely, and they should be able to work that out before the lead if they know that South has a singleton diamond. If you want to get into the papers, then try for Nigel's very nice line.
Even thinking of bidding 7NT is a serious error. Bridge Analyser showed that 7H is making 99.4% whereas 7NT only makes 23.3% of the time.
As I wrote in the post, my evaluation of 7
♥ was 100%. I assume the outcome of that contract to be 60% or so in a slightly-above-average context.
The evaluation of the possible useful cards if 7NT is not laydown, i.e.
♠Q,
♣J,
♣ length,
♦Q, plus the additional chance of a squeeze, made the case to 7NT. Life is short
The squeeze (compound in this case) gives you the 13th trick every time when:
(a) E has 4+
♣ and does not lead
♦
(b) E has
♣J10x on whichever lead
I think this should correspond to the 23% chance you calculated. Before seeing the double-dummy, you still have the chance of an extra card.
So for me it depends a bit on the context.
Declarer wins ♠A and ♥AKQJT
If East protects ♣s, he is susceptible to a compound squeeze: on the 4th ♥, East must abandon a pointed suit.
1. If East keeps fewer than 3 ♦s, then declarer cashes ♦AK discarding a ♣. Now, ♣AKQ execute a double-squeeze. with ♠s a threat against both opponents.
2. If East keeps fewer than 2 ♠s, then declarer cashes ♠K. Now, ♣AKQ execute a different double-squeeze with ♦s a threat against both opponents.