Posted 2016-August-10, 06:12
I am still thinking about the end position shown. I do not regard it as easy at all. Obviously there are five winners, but no easy way to take them. I'll give it more thought, but while I was going over it the following occurred to me. Suppose the clubs are such that they cannot be unblocked, all spots in hand higher than all spots on the board. After the club finesse wins, how about a small club from the board? As the cards lie, E is in and has only spades and diamonds. Again the plan is to ruff a diamond, draw trump ending in hand, get back to the board in clubs and take the remaining heart for ten tricks. Maybe E started with Kxx? So 4=1=5=3? Could be. But so what? If W is allowed to hold the trick with the J he has only red cards left. If he returns a heart you give them their ruff, they get one heart, one club, one ruff, you get the rest ( after they get their ruff, you will be able to ruff a diamonds in dummy). If, in with the club J, W returns a diamond, ruff it, draw trump, go back to the board in clubs and take your heart.
Added: I see this line fails if E started with KJX in clubs. Club to Q, duck to club K/J, another club forces me to take my A, blocking the suit. Not A bad line though.
I will work on this end position, but so far I do not see it. Preserving the club deuce seems easy, finessing the club and then playing a small club seems reasonable, both are things I might not see at the table but later would think that I should have seen. But I have already put more time in with the end position than would be allowed at a table and I do not yet see it.
Which makes it a good problem. Clearly I have a blind spot here.And my congrats to alok.
Ken