DavidKok, on 2020-October-06, 06:25, said:
I'm not sure about the "well bid". Your contract can be made on anything but a club lead, but that doesn't mean that the 3NT call rated to be an odds-on action.
As for the play, let's go step by step. On a heart lead you are guaranteed 3 spade, 2 heart and 1 diamond trick, so you are tasked with developing 3 more. There are several chances - the ♥9 can take a trick, the ♠6 can take a trick, you can develop one trick in clubs by forcing out the ace and king, and there are diamond prospects. Since you need so many tricks playing on diamonds immediately is indicated. You are missing KQxxxx in that suit, and by taking the double finesse you are entitled to three tricks in that suit provided West holds at least one of the honours and at most 3 diamonds, or holds both the honours. This would put you up to 8 tricks, and after that you can look into the other options for that 9'th trick.
So you start by winning the lead as cheaply as possible, and (correctly) playing a small diamond to the 10 or 9. Running the jack here needlessly costs a trick if west covers from K/Q/Kx/Qx. After the ten holds the trick, best play is to cross back to the hand in spades and play a small diamond to the 9. You may have the read that West holds both missing diamond honours, but if East is a (very) good defender they may have ducked from Q872, limiting you to two tricks if you play a diamond to the jack now. So cross back in spades (why spades? Well, you can't reliably cross in clubs and you only have one heart stopper left) and play a small diamond, and no matter what West does you are now entitled to three diamond tricks.
So where to find that ninth trick? There are three plausible options - knock out the clubs and win the third round, turn that fourth spade in dummy into a trick, and somehow score the ♥9. West's failure to continue hearts when in with a diamond suggests the hearts are breaking 1-6 ('known' on the bidding, but I really don't think it pays to trust people's bidding if we don't have to), so playing on clubs is safe. Your ♥Q96 form a double guard against East's ♥JT8xx, so you can afford to lose the lead twice. This is what went critically wrong in your own line - you gave East another entry in the form of the fourth spade, while pitching a heart which blanked your 9 (at that point 9x was still a guard). So it is safe to play on clubs, losing twice and winning the third round, establishing nine tricks.
For the cherry on top, there are still spade and heart chances for an overtrick. You have successfully lost 3 tricks by now (two clubs and a diamond), so the count is right for a squeeze. Since East is known to hold heart length only he can be squeezed. However, by cashing the queen of spades early there is no entry back to the hand, so there is only a pseudo-squeeze chance. You can play for this by running the spades, and hoping that either they break 3-3 or that East had spade length and didn't realise they could freely pitch the winning ♥T on the diamond (on your line East went wrong a trick earlier, where they should have pitched the ♥8 instead of the ♠T).
I think that at the table this is line I would take, likely making 9 tricks on a heart lead (which is also the Double Dummy score). Something to point out is that playing on clubs early (to cross back to the hand after winning a diamond finesse, for example) is risky because it helps the defenders set up their long clubs, i.e. if they split 4-3 both defenders can duck after which it is risky to lose the lead. Also you want to tackle the spades last - either they break 3-3 or they don't (or someone gets squeezed, or thinks they are getting squeezed, or generally misdefended). You cannot establish extra tricks in that suit in any way, so there is no need to play them.
Thanks, guys,
It was the last thing at night so I was pretty tired! I figured 3NT was possible (ish) because after the weak 2
♥ I thought I had a good idea of where the cards were. Wests 3
♣ bid was also a bit strange.
Stepping through it again, when I reach the position shyams shows I can play the
♦A and if East discards the
♠9 my 6 is good. If not then the
♣10 is still fine.
Looks like my brain just turned to soup straight afterwards.