Posted 2013-September-24, 17:37
I suggest you give a closer look at the hand. I am not 100% sure I would play this way, but if I reached 4♥ from the East side and got, say, a high spade lead, I would probably win and realize that I have to play on clubs.
The failure to lead a top diamond would persuade me that N has at least one top diamond, along with 5 spades headed by at most the J.
I would therefore place S with a club honour, and I cannot bring the suit home unless it is stiff, or S has KQ tight.
So at trick 2 I lead a club to the A.
Having now established that S has short clubs, I'd be inclined to play him for the heart length. So heart K, low to the J, and pull the last trump. A club off dummy leaves N with no winning option. I have the entries to ruff either spades or (eventually) diamond to my hand, ruff a club in dummy and return to my hand to claim 10 tricks.
The fact that (apparently) nobody in your club made more than 8 tricks is not a reason to start doubling makeable contracts.
Anyway, leaving aside the question of the play of the hand, I wouldn't double as N or S.
N's 3♠ call is commonly played, by good players, as competitive, with no game interest (double would be a game try), so S has no strong reason to think that the hand belongs to NS. I'd expect a 3♠ bid on as little as Axxxx x Qxxx xxx, and now the odds are surely against beating 4♥. Even as it was, that club 10, which played little role in the auction, was critical to the result, at least for those who went down.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari