How would you like to be in six hearts on this deal, after West leads a trump?
Not much, you'd probably say, but when Giorgio Belladonna, the great Italian star, played the hand in the 1969 world championship, he wound up making the slam. Not only that, but it turned out that there was no way to stop him!
Belladonna started with three rounds of trumps and four rounds of spades, discarding a diamond from dummy to produce the following position:
He now led the ace and another club. West won with the king and had to return a diamond from his K-J-8-7, permitting Belladonna to avoid a diamond loser and so make the slam.
Observe that it would not have helped West to drop his king of clubs on the ace in order to avoid being end-played. Had he done that, Belladonna would surely have found the winning countermeasure.
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He would have taken the next club with dummy's queen and then played the ace and another diamond, saddling West with the lead. West's forced diamond return would have handed Belladonna a ruff-and-discard, and the improbable slam would have come home.

