Teams.
On the ♣J lead you can either go for the simple heart finesse (with a fallback on ♦AK onside available), or try ♠AKJ pitching diamonds -- possibly cashing the ♥A first.
While it may be possible to list all winning cases for the second line, the enumeration gets quickly unwieldy -- especially if you have to do it at the table! Any suggestions on how to practically evaluate the winning chances of that approach?
On the ♣J lead you can either go for the simple heart finesse (with a fallback on ♦AK onside available), or try ♠AKJ pitching diamonds -- possibly cashing the ♥A first. While it may be possible to list all winning cases for the second line, the enumeration gets quickly unwieldy -- especially if you have to do it at the table! Any suggestions on how to practically evaluate the winning chances of that approach?'
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If the decision is close and difficult, it is probably best to toss a coin, rather than mentally exhaust ourselves.
No shortcut but initially, perhaps ...
- Look for the best line without bothering by how much it is best.
- Attempt drastic simplifying assumptions.
- Ensure they are relatively/qualitatively reasonable
- Rather than absolutely/quantitatively accurate.
- Watch out for extreme anomalies.
For example, focus on normal breaks. Here you might assume
- ♥ break 2-2 or 3-1.
- ♦ break 3-3 or 4-2.
- ♠ break 4-3 or 5-2.
Guesses:
Line 1 (♥ finesse: About 60% (LHO has ♥K -- about 50%. Failing that RHO has ♦AK or ♦AKx -- < 25%)
Line 2: ♥A then ♠s: About 55%: ♥K is singleton (10%). Failing that RHO has ♠Q (50%).
Line 3: ♠s then ♥s: More than 60%
(a) if RHO has ♠Q then ♥A and another ♠.
(b) If LHO has ♠Q, then ♥ finesse.
(Usually succeeds when RHO has ♠Q -- about 50%). Failing that when LHO started with ♥K and can't obtain a ♠ or ♦ ruff -- more than 30%.
We should take the silence of opponents into account and also their defensive skills but, on the whole, I reckon that line 3 is best. Caveat: Arithmetic is not my long suit and I welcome correction.