CamHenry, on 2012-September-03, 03:16, said:
I think we're missing an important point here: if declarer is silly enough to play hearts from the bottom up, he's silly enough to check for an outstanding trump "just in case". He then loses three of the remaining tricks, as E pitches a small diamond on the spade then wins the ♥K, with two diamonds left to cash.
I don't see how it is possible to justify a ruling that declarer loses exactly one trick in this situation.
I think
you're missing an important point here. Declarer stated "you get a heart". Implicit in this statement was that he would retain trump control so as to be able to enjoy the established heart(s). [If you swap
♥A and
♥K round in the position, surely no-one would consider awarding anything other than 1 trick to the defence.] In this context, playing the last round of trumps is not a normal line, whilst the play of
♥Q or
♥J may be normal, albeit inferior, when made by a player who did not appreciate that singleton K was even a possibility.
phil_20686, on 2012-September-03, 04:17, said:
Ruling that you lose a heart here seems pretty bad at club level. Its just the kind of ruling that creates lots of ill feeling for no reason. Claiming is basically a courtesy to the defence. I would like club players to claim a lot more. I have lost count of the times I have tanked in defence for several minutes, on potentially very difficult end positions, when in fact declarer had all the rest of the tricks, or a hand where the position was basically a non event, but they don't claim because they had one of these rulings and now "don;t ever claim".
Its different if you are playing in a high level tournament, where it is legitimate to take pretty much any excuse to make your opponents waste brain power, or to take advantage of their poor claims.
You seem to be contradicting yourself here. If it's legitimate to "take advantage of poor claims" at high levels, it's equally legitimate to do so at club level.
phil_20686, on 2012-September-03, 04:17, said:
No one likes these rulings. Declarer is usually annoyed that you are enforcing a frankly bizarre line of play. The other tables don't like as it basically randomises the results for no reason. Often the defenders don't even like it. If you have defended well and already saved a trick and were hoping for a good score, and your efforts are rendered irrelevant, and rob you of a good story.
Is that the old "protecting the field" argument? We haven't see the full hand, but quite possibly declarer "randomised" the result earlier by failing to take the heart finesse when dummy had the lead.
phil_20686, on 2012-September-03, 04:24, said:
I remember a hand in a club where I had Jx opposite AQTxx, and I claimed very early as we were a bit late saying "Ill take the club finesse and it it wins I have x tricks and it loses I have y tricks." and the director ruled that my line of play meant playing low to the queen and if it won, cashing the ace rather than repeating the finesse. (i needed three club tricks to have x tricks), and so that I should get Y tricks with Kxx in the slot.
Pretty much still angry about it two years later.
That was an obviously incorrect ruling (perhaps the TD didn't understand the suit combination), but each claim has to be assessed on its merits.