wank, on 2015-November-11, 07:19, said:
you're signalling differently to the rest of the world. everyone else signals what they have, not try to tell partner which cards to play to which trick.
When you lead the king of spades, you are known to have two trump tricks, but may have three. I agree that the 9 of diamonds tells partner what one has, and he then works out what to play. The pieces of information that you need to give to partner are as follows, in order of importance:
a) How many trump tricks do I have - this must be two or three; only a loony doubles with one.
b) What is my heart holding - this can be the king or queen - nothing else is relevant.
c) What I have in clubs - I think this is largely irrelevant, but the club count could be I suppose. If there is a chance we will show an even number or odd number by our diamond plays.
We are clearly going to play three diamonds, and the first one should be a). We play the nine of diamonds if we have three trump tricks and the two of diamonds if we have two trump tricks.
After that we move on to b). If we have the king of hearts we play the higher of the remaining two diamonds, if we have the queen of hearts, we play the middle one, if neither the lowest.
After that if we have a choice, we should play high low in diamonds with an even number of clubs and low high with an odd number of clubs.
So, I think Mike Bell was correct to play the nine of diamonds, and then defended perfectly by playing his lowest diamond to deny the king or queen of hearts (he does not want partner ducking the heart). Of course it is possible that he was little Johnny out of step with the rest of the world. However, little Johnny is often right.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar