West leads the ♣A, East following with the ♣6, and West switches to the ♠4, East playing the ♠10. Now plan the play. (Hint: defensive ♦ honours are split)
Additional info: West has three ♠s to the Ace. And declarer takes the second trick with the ♠Q. Can you now see the solution? And there's a clue in the header: Defence Brilliant
And now this is the last clue: If declarer decides to draw trumps at trick three as actually happened at the table - not my preferred line: I agree with other commentators that leading a ♦ towards dummy at trick three is preferable - what can do the defenders do in the subsequent play that prevents them being on lead later in the hand?
(And this is why I enjoyed posting this hand, even two brilliant plays by the defence was not enough to stop declarer having his own final moment of glory in the end(play).