Recommended lead is the ♥ K, promising a sequence of honours (KQJ or KQT).
Count your winning tricks; AKQJ = 4 spades tricks, and 3 other aces gives 7. Cash the queen of spades first, then lead a low card towards the AKJ to cash the remaining winners. This is important as if you cash the ace first, you will have no other entry to the spades.
Cash honours in the shorter suit first, then lead towards your remaining honours.
The recommended lead is the ♥ J, which denies the ♥ Q and promises a sequence of honours JT9. You may hold the K or the A too, but not usually both. When you do hold an honour above the queen too, it is called an "interior sequence".
Beat the ♥ J with the K and luckily it wins the trick. Next you should start by playing clubs. Play a low club to the ten and then a low club back towards you remaining AKQJ, following the guideline from the previous hand; cash tricks from your short suit first. This guarantees 5 tricks.
It would be careless to play the Ace first. As you can see on this hand, the clubs are split as unevenly as possible, 5 in one hand an none in the other, Although a 5-0 break is unlikely, on this hand we have the T as well as the AKQJ and can always guarantee all 5 tricks by cashing the tricks in the right order.
Counting your top winners, we have 4 ♠ + 1 ♥ + 4 ♣ = 9 tricks, as required. We will lose a lot of hearts and diamonds if we lose the lead so we must take the lead with the ♥ A immediatly (don't give them a chance to start playing diamonds, your weakness).
You must be careful when playing the spade suit. Can you see how to guarantee 4 tricks? The hand with 4 spades has no other winners in any other suit, it has no "entry". So the best way to play the suit is to cash the honours from the short suit first. We cash the ♠ Q, play the ♠ J and overtake this trick with the ♠ A. We can afford to play an honour on an honour like this because we also hold the ♠ T. It is also neccecary because we have no other entry to the long suit. Playing spades in this way gives 4 tricks.
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