CSGibson, on 2011-October-20, 10:56, said:
Ok, so this was the final auction (rotated for convenience). A few notes on the auction: I feel like both N and S made questionable early decisions, S not to upgrade his hand out of 1N, and N not to bid 3
♣ over the transfer, even before the cue-bidding questions (as an aside, S thought 4D was a last-train, not a control bid). That being said, how would you play this?
The lead is the 7
♠, covered by the Q, K, & A.
roflol! So, it WAS the wrap-around cue. "Don't cue anything if you have everything."
Play seems simple enough, but that means I must be missing something.
I'd lead small to the heart 9. If nothing of note happens other than losing to the Jack, I'll win whatever lead comes forth in hand and lead another small heart toward the Queen, intending to hook. If the King pops left, I rise Ace, cash diamond Jack, and then back to hand with the heart 10. If not, I presumably win the Queen, cash the diamond Jack, club King, ruff club, and play diamonds. I need two pitches. If LHO ruffs in too soon, I suppose I pray for the spade to be doubleton.
All sorts of interesting things could happen along that road, encouraging some tack switch, but this general approach seems OK.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.