WellSpyder, on 2014-March-11, 11:18, said:
Is that right? I can see the reasoning for that if you need to establish the suit for one loser (you pick up Jx offside, while playing to 10 on the second round doesn't set up the suit if RHO has Ax). But here you only need to establish a second winner, not the whole suit, so I'm not sure that argument applies.
Yeah it is. It is counter intuitive, but if you think about it this way, I think it will make sense:
My strategy is to lose to the ace offside, and pick up the ace onside plus AJ doubleton offside. Regardless of what they do with Ax(x) (ducking or winning at any frequency), I will pick up those combos. Any other strategy is exploitable by their play with Ax(x). No strategy does better unless you are exploiting them (for instance, bad players typically win the ace on your right with the ace often enough that in real life we always play low to the ten next after they do that), but if you are trying to exploit them you may be exploited.
Ofc if you have any kind of read on the table action/tempo/english they play their cards with whatever I don't recommend making the theoretical play but with nothing else to go on I think it's fine to do so. People are very often surprised this is not actually a 50/50 guess on the second round though so I thought I'd mention it.
If what I said did not make sense, another way to look at it is that if they try to balance their Ax(x) play with AJ, ducking a small percentage (equivalent to the amount of time they are dealt AJ doubleton) making your decision on whether they have Ax(x) or AJ tight completely neutral after they win the ace, that means they are winning with Ax(x) a small amount of the time which means it is slightly more likely that the ace is onside than offside after they don't win the ace.
This reasoning even applies with KQT opp xx where obviously AJ doubleton offside is very unlikely, it's still your best strategy in theory. I think this is only practical when you have KQT9xx opp xx and need 2 tricks, in that case when they win the ace on your right there are many examples of good players playing low to the queen on the next round vs other good players. With less cards it becomes more rare to see in real life since AJ doubleton offside becomes more unlikely.
Also, I failed to mention stiff ace, they could have that of course so my explanation is incomplete but basically AJ doubleton is more likely than stiff A.