I was involved in the NB discussion.
Although it was posted there as playing against robots, I think the general discussion was not confined to that. In particluar we spoke some about how to play under the assumption that the lead from either xxxx or Qxxx would be third best. We assumed that this agreement could be trusted.
My thoughts after the lead of the 4 to the J and the K. Top two trump making sure to keep low sots in the board for transportation (this transpotation issue was the point of the original post). Not play K and and T, watching the spots before playing from dummy. Assume, of course, the Q has not appeared. Lho has played 4(the lead) and then spot spot. If the two spots x,y are higher than the 4 then he did not start with Qxy4 and lead third highest. So the Q is on the right. Now suppose W has played 4,3,x where x is one of 678. This is the only problem continuation. Even if W held spots x>y>4>3 he had to play the 3 so as not to give the show away by playing xy.
So it comes down to
Qx43 opposite Jyz
or
xy43 opposite QJz
where x,y,z all come from 6,7,8.
These two seem equally likely with three ways to do either.
Now I do not know whether the bots actually lead 3/5 including from spots.
Gib system notes:
Quote
In suit contracts, GIB's opening lead is frequently a side singleton or doubleton, to try to get a ruff. When it leads a suit bid by the opponents, this is almost always the reason. Read the book
Winning Suit Contract Leads for insight on the way GIB leads against suits.
If it leads an honor that's part of a sequence, it uses standard honor leads (K from AKx, A from AK doubleton). If it leads from a long suit, it leads 4th best (but see above: it doesn't always lead its long suit). When leading from 3 small, it leads top of nothing against NT, low against a suit contract.
My choice was to ruff the T. I acknowledge that perhaps E migjt have played the Q from QJx but I did not think it likely enough to sway me.
I do think it is somewhat field dependent, or at least opponent dependent. It has become popular, including at high levels, to lead the second highest from four spats. Hey, I can work that one out.
Side note: At first glance Restricted choice in spots might suggest playing W for the Q. After all, suppose W plays the 7 under the T. If he started with 7643 he had the option of playing the 6 instead of the 7 while if he had the Q743 he had no option. But this is countered by possible restricted Choice for E and it balances out. Easier:to avoid RC: count the ways of putting one of the 678 on the left, together iwith Q43, and the ways of putting two of 876 on the left with 43. Three ways for either.
So I think anyway.