Posted 2012-October-28, 09:46
Yep. Got it. Playing the ♦K is not plain silly. It is a good play, if you are sure that East holds the ♦J and you are sure that South holds KJTx. (If South has the ♦J, you blow two tricks for the defense, but you may be willing to sacrifice those to increase the probability that the contract goes down.)
What makes it odd to me is that a West player who is capable of throwing the ♦K, a complicated unblocking play that caters to certain layouts, is silly enough to block the club suit by returning the ♣3. If he would have played back the ♣7, an easy unblocking play, ...
With all this, I can't get any feeling for the level of the players. My first impression -with all these blocking plays- was that the players are not very good. I don't think South is very good, given how he played the contract. In that case South may well have hitched before winning the club trick, just because he was surprised that he was going to win that trick to then realize that it didn't matter which club trick he was going to win.
Bridge-technically, he should of course take the trick in tempo since it doesn't matter whether he wins with the king or the ten. He should do the being surprised and the realizing later. However, you cannot postpone surprise. Surprise comes when it comes and it has priority.
I would take South away from the table and ask him how he "experienced" the first few tricks. Did the play go as he had planned? What did and what didn't? Maybe that will tell whether South hitched and why. If South hitched because he was surprised, I would consider that a bridge reason, certainly for a less experienced player. If South hitched because he was deciding how to play the diamonds, then South doesn't have a bridge reason for hitching before winning the club trick. He should have hitched after winning it (or better: before playing from dummy in trick 1).
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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