Posted 2021-May-24, 18:49
I strongly recommend Clyde Love’s Bridge Squeezes Complete, one of the (imo) essential books for anyone aspiring to be a good declarer. I think you can find a copy pretty cheaply online, if no local used bookstore has a copy.
As for this hand, a simple rule, that works when trying to squeeze one player, is to ‘rectify’ the count. You need 11 tricks. You have 10 easy winners, given that you know where the heart Ace lies and you’ve lost one trick already. For (most) simple squeezes, you need to lose a second trick fairly early.
There is zero danger of anything going wrong if you lead a heart towards the King at trick 3. That sets up your 10th trick.
Most west’s will fly the Ace. If they do, they will usually return another heart, but (if they don’t) you need to cash that heart king before running the spades.
Love is excellent in explaining the correct order of cashing winners when inflicting various forms of squeezes.
Basically, once you have a better understanding of the principles involved, your visualization will improve. When in a challenging contract, assume the cards sit as you need them to sit, and try to picture what the hands will look like if you win ALL of your trumps but one...when, in other words, you are down to x void void 10xx and in dummy have void void J AKx
Ok...what does west have?
He has to have void void Q QJx.
You lead your last spade....what can he do?
If he pitches the diamond Queen, your Jack is good and you pitch a club and claim.
So he has to pitch a club....which sets you if his partner has the club 10, so he isn’t giving up. However, when you have 10xx, you can pitch the now useless diamond, cross your fingers (and anything else convenient) and hope the club AK draw the QJ.
Note that, on the layout you give, west made a bad play at trick 2.
He knows his partner holds the diamond Ace, since you’d win with the Ace, in order to be able to lead a diamond towards the Jack.
Therefore a good player would cash the heart Ace and then lead either another heart or the diamond King. A low diamond is a non-thinking play.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
1♥ is 10-15, 2♥ is a less-than-constructive raise.
The opening lead is the Q♦ (Rusinow), followed by a low diamond to the 9 and A which is ruffed.
I can make it at this point, but I got the timing wrong even after having figured out the basic idea.
1) You figure it out.
2) How do I get this right at the table even remotely consistently?
3) In actuality, one of the club honors was to my right and it didn't matter.
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With the diagram layout, Declarer can drive out ♥A and run trumps to squeeze West in the minors