mike777, on 2014-September-09, 16:08, said:
In any case I will try a small c.
Why do so many believe that passive leads require better defense?
I understand if passive leads at notrumps are shocking for you, changing habits require some time.
I for my part have given up fourth best leads, because I have my doubts whether they help the defense more than declarer.
I simply lead attitude.
So if I lead a high spot card, partner knows I am not interested. If I lead a middle one I don't know what is best, and if I lead lowest I am serious.
Simple and often effective and declarer can not tell whether I led lowest from four (because no switch looked attractive to me) or five or six and I may not lead lowest from 5 or more if a switch in another suit looks attractive.
When I lead high and do not hit partner's suit, which does happen surprisingly often (confirmed by the book mentioned here), declarer will usually win and start establishing his tricks.
So at most 2 candidate suits usually remain to switch to when partner wins a trick.
Is a halfway intelligent partner looking at his hand and dummy and what he knows about declarers hand so likely to misguess which suit he should try next?
Even if partner wins the first trick and needs to switch at trick two, which is obvious most of the time, he has a high chance to get this right.
What is important is that your lead agreements show your interest in the suit led and partner can distinguish an 8 spot from a 2 spot and this is not even taking into account there is a signalling convention called Smith-Peter.
Not so hard for those past the beginner stage.
Rainer Herrmann