This really requires more information about the opponents leads. This is a principle of restricted choice situation. Why did they lead a diamond? What is the situation in the round suits for a diamond lead to be right? My partner and I consider the 10 to be an honour, and will lead small from a suit headed by the 10. Is this their agreement? This really matters, because, this really screams of a singleton lead. If it's a singleton lead, what honours can West hold here that wouldn't preclude the singleton lead? Surely not AK of clubs for example.
After considering this, do we really think it's alright to take the spade finesse? Maybe we can get opponents to crash their club honours? A
♠ and out a spade could be right! If the spade finesse loses, the hand that might have diamond shortness is on lead again, and can't give themselves the ruff, but they can cross in either round suit potentially for a ruff. So, I'm tempted to play East for the singleton K
♠. This would be a very different situation if I had any intermediates in spades at all.... but... I don't.
And then... sometimes... Spades break 2-2, and the diamond lead was from TXXX.
I'm probably not taking the finesse, and playing small to the A
♠. It gives me some hope of shockingly poor defense in the event of a 4-0 spade break.
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3 possible lines...
1. JohnU's line: ♦KJ, ♠A, ♦Q, ♦A
2. Rmnka447's line: ♦K, run ♠Q.
3. Cash ♦KJ. Advance ♠Q to ♠A.
Line 1 wins when
- ♠K is singleton (declarer makes an overtrick).
- Defender has ♠Kx doubleton and 3 ♦s.
- Defender with ♠Kxx tripleton has 4+ ♦s.
Line 2 wins when
- RHO has doubleton ♠Kx.
Line 3 wins when
- RHO, with doubleton ♠Kx, covers (as he should).
- LHO has doubleton ♠Kx and 3 ♦s.
- LHO has ♠Kxx and 4+ ♦s.
If RHO has ♠Kx doubleton (3 cases), then Rmnka447's line 2 makes an overtrick, so might be best at pairs.