Cyberyeti, on 2012-April-18, 09:50, said:
Is that situation more likely than singleton club and xxx trumps the other side and also you're giving up some of the chance of 13 where clubs are 4-2 and Q♠ drops, and also what are you going to do if he ruffs the 2nd club with the 10.
It may be successful, but is it best ?
I analyzed this in Jack, after starting with
♥A,
♠ to A and
♣ to A:
Expected score for playing:
-
♣K: 766.8
-
♠8: 533.8
It is not clear for me where the difference is coming from.
If
♠are 4-1 then West can go wrong by ruffing the 2nd Club low.
Or if West has 4c
♠ and 2c
♣ he can go wrong by ruffing the 2nd Club.
But I don't think this is a good explanation of the result of the analysis.
....Probably this is another failure of the DD analysis:
If West has
♠QTxx then you are down if you start with
♠AK.
Therefor Jack prefers to start with
♣ because he knows DD that he will go down when starting with
♠AK and that he can make against that distribution when he does not start with
♠AK (can make if he finesses later in
♠).
But when he has to play on spades later he will not finesse anyway and still go down.