JLOGIC, on 2011-August-31, 02:00, said:
Your analysis seems almost spot on Valardent. At the table I would think:
There are 3 cases of a spade and 2 small diamonds on my left.
There is 1 case of 3 spades and 2 small diamonds on my left.
There are 3 cases of Kxx spades and 2 small diamonds on my right.
There are 3 cases of 2 small spades on my left and 2 small diamonds.
There is 1 case of Kxxx of spades on your left with 2 small diamonds
There are 3 cases of Kx of spades on my right with 2 small dimonds
*** You seemed to forget 4-0 spades on your left with a doubleton diamond as a win for not cashing the SA
Calculating how many breaks is easy, for instance there are 3 possible combos of a stiff on your left, because there are 3 small stiffs LHO can have. There are 3 combos of Kx because K? the ? can only be one of the 3 small ones.
So, it is 7 cases to 7. Normally the edge would be to cashing the ace becuse it loses to a 4-0 break but picks up a 3-1 break, and a 3-1 combo is more likely than a 4-0. However, here it must be realized that LHO having short spades AND short diamonds is unlikely. Therefore, him having King third of spades and 2 small diamonds is far more likely than a stiff spade and 2 small diamonds.
So, keeping the ace in dummy is right imo. This is how I would consider it at the table, no fancy math is required and it wouldn't take you that long.
To sum it up (not bothering when
♠ are 2-2):
Line "
♠A" is better in those 4 cases : _____ Line "finesse" is better in those 4 cases :
x
♠ xx
♦ in West (3 cases) (1)_____________
♠Kxx xx
♦ in West (3 cases) (2)
xxx
♠ xx
♦ in West (1 case) (3)____________
♠Kxxx xx
♦ in West (1 case) (4)
So (4) is a bit less frequent than (3), but (2) is much more frequent than (1)
When
♦J falls, playing "
♠A" line wins also in (2), making "
♠A" line best.
When
♦J does not fall, "finesse" line is best.
Anyone out there who can explain how to calculate the odds difference between (1) & (2) and (3) & (4) ?