FrancesHinden, on 2011-June-22, 15:55, said:
You do have to cash your winners slightly carefully. I've told you in advance what the club position is, but you don't know what's going on in clubs until you cash them. Simply saying you will 'read the position' isn't quite enough: if no-one has discarded a club and everyone follows to 3 rounds, how are you going to decide whether LHO has bared the DJ with a long club, or RHO has bared the DK with a long club?
I don't see much difference between the problem when the defenders keep 1
♣ and 2
♠, versus keeping 3
♠. I compare these two defensive strategies:
1. The defenders keep one large spade each and one small (<
♠6) spade between them (RHO discarding one small spade), no clubs, and three diamonds. So long as they treat the two small spade spots as described, LHO not revealing a small spade and RHO not revealing both of them, the ambiguity about spade length remains.
2. The defenders keep two spades, the long club, and three diamonds.
Maybe #2 has a practical advantage in that even if the defenders mess up by revealing the spade position, the unknown club situation still disguises the distribution. Is that the point, or is there more?
By the way, additional discarding strategies to consider are
3. The defenders keep two spades -- one big one little -- and four diamonds.
of which
3a. The sleepy way: spades are 1-1; declarer must exit in spades.
3b. The unexpected way: one defender holds both spades and a singleton diamond honor, the other hold THREE diamonds.