pescetom, on 2024-December-06, 11:11, said:
Which is basically Davidkok's second line.
That was my first thought too, although I was concerned that if South had the K he would return a diamond like lightning. But I couldn't see any real alternative and it seemed more likely than not that the K was in North, hopefully with no second trump. I too had read the auction as spades 4-4 and I didn't see this conservative player overcalling vulnerable on KJxx QJxxx x(x) xx(x).
So I played low towards the Q and the K appeared in North, followed by the lead of another spade. After that it was plain sailing and 6
♦ turned out to be a vice-top below a 6NT and the rest in 5
♦+1 or 3NT+3. The analysis indicated that 6NT was the Par. I was pleased for my promising intermediate partner who had spotted and called the slam, move on to next board.
But something was troubling me and it was only on the way home that I realised what it was.
As regular readers know, I strongly believe that anyone posting a play problem owes it to all readers to disclose EVERY bit of information that the real life declarer had. Here, for example, knowing that declarer considered north to be conservative is relevant, if only to the extent of modifying one’s views on the likelihood of possible distributions. A conservative bidder, holding at best KJ and QJ in his long suits, vulnerable, is far more likely to be 5-5 than would be an aggressive bidder. In addition, a conservative bidder is more likely than an aggressive bidder to hold both black kings. While this isn’t one of those ‘sure thing’ inferences one sometimes gets, it’s a clue and, since declarer in real life had it, we should have it as well. It’s simply wrong, imo, to hold back information even when the OP doesn’t think it’s relevant. It’s worse when, as here, the OP does recognize its relevance.
End of rant (until the next time)
The squeeze is pretty obvious to a skilled player, but knowing that north is favourite to hold at least the spade king and, more than would an aggressive player, the club king gives us a reasonable play for 13 tricks. Run the trump…reducing to Qx AK10 void A. North has to keep 3 hearts. Most defenders give count honestly when defending slams even when they ‘should’ know that count is irrelevant to partner, so against a non expert I’d expect to have a virtually full inferential count.
North will have reduced to 2=3=0=1 or 1=3=0=2. If I believe the former, club to the ace. If that doesn’t drop the king, I play three rounds of hearts. North is 99% likely to hold the spade king, so he’s endplayed.
If the club king drops, I’m in the delicious position of being mid-way through a progressive squeeze…back to the spade ace, cash the club Queen and north surrenders if he has the spade king.
I think the squeeze line is obviously best regardless. The fact that it may yield an overtrick is merely the icing on the cake, made more probable by knowing north to be conservative. So the withheld information isn’t actually relevant other than to strengthen declarer’s view of how to play and increase his anticipation of a possible overtrick. Nevertheless, I repeat my (never-ending) plea that posters of such problems provide every scrap of information available at the table even if it appears likely to be irrelevant. Not every player appreciates how useful information may be, whether it’s positive (as here…knowing that north is conservative affects our views) or negative….knowing that an aggressive player didn’t take action when, on some plausible lies, he would/might have done something.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari