The 2C bid? Useless? What do you think?
#41
Posted 2008-November-04, 12:22
The chances that a deal contains a hand with 22+ HCP is about 0.33%, about 1 in 300 boards. Only half of those will be on your side (1 in 600 boards).
If you hold 22 HCP, the other 3 player share 18 HCP averaging to 6 HCP each.
So if your partnership is not having a SAYC 2♣ opening, this will only matter on 1 in 600 boards, and most of the time partner will have 6 HCP to answer over a 1.level opening.
So the chance to be damaged by the lack of the strong forcing 2♣ opening is less than 1: 1200.
Having e.g. a weak 2 ♣ opening will occur once every 30 boards.
So there is a chance that your benefit from 40 weak ♣ openings is bigger than the loss of 1 missed big board.
#42
Posted 2008-November-04, 12:46
hotShot, on Nov 4 2008, 01:22 PM, said:
The chances that a deal contains a hand with 22+ HCP is about 0.33%, about 1 in 300 boards. Only half of those will be on your side (1 in 600 boards).
If you hold 22 HCP, the other 3 player share 18 HCP averaging to 6 HCP each.
So if your partnership is not having a SAYC 2♣ opening, this will only matter on 1 in 600 boards, and most of the time partner will have 6 HCP to answer over a 1.level opening.
So the chance to be damaged by the lack of the strong forcing 2♣ opening is less than 1: 1200.
Having e.g. a weak 2 ♣ opening will occur once every 30 boards.
So there is a chance that your benefit from 40 weak ♣ openings is bigger than the loss of 1 missed big board.
- There are plenty of 2♣ opening bids that have less than 22 hcp.
- If partner has to worry you have 22+ when you open a 1 bid, this has a huge impact on how you respond to opening bids, making jump shifts, and many other areas of system. To put it another way, even if partner DOES respond to your opening bid, you may never be able to show a hand as good as you hold anyway. Your philosphy seems to be 'partner has responded so I am back to even with someone who opened 2♣' which is far from true.
- What do you open on strong balanced hands?
- Having a weak 2♣ opening is not the same as getting to open 2♣. Someone is likely to open in front of you. And where do you get once in 30 boards anyway? It seems like a lot less to me. Are you suggesting each side opens a weak two bid in each suit once in 30 boards, so 8/30 = over a fourth of boards are begun with specifically a weak two bid? No way.
#43
Posted 2008-November-04, 13:52
My calculation was that if you require a six card suit for weak two bids and are fairly conservative with the 2♣ openings, the odds of having a weak 2♣ in first seat are about 1/60 and of having a strong 2♣ in first seat about 1/150 (I required 22+ balanced or 20+ unbalanced).
Obviously the weak two becomes more frequent if you include some five-card suits. But you also need to consider other seats; if you hold a weak 2♣ in third seat you will not often get to open it (usually someone opens in front of you) whereas if you hold a strong 2♣ in third seat your chances are lot better (yes sometimes someone preempts in front of you).
I agree that if you open at the one-level with a "strong 2♣ hand" and get partner to reply you are not always back to par. But you will sometimes do better than par too, for example you might have an auction like 1♦(NAT) - 2♦(weak raise) and find a 4-4 diamond fit slam when opener has a balanced 22, when after a 2♣ opening you might see 2♣-2♦-2NT-4NT-Pass. In general most people's auctions after 2♣ strong are pretty poor, so if you don't get passed out your chances of getting to par or better are actually pretty decent.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#44
Posted 2008-November-04, 14:29
awm, on Nov 4 2008, 02:52 PM, said:
You will end up worse FAR more often than you will end up better. For example when you have that balanced 22 and partner responds anything but 2♦ or some amount of notrump, what do you rebid? And that's once you have gotten past the hurdle of him responding at all.
And of course you know most of us don't play the single raise in a minor that way to begin with. If it goes 1♦ P 3♦ I have no idea how you should investigate.
#45
Posted 2008-November-04, 15:32
jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
I think the standard definition of the SAYC 2♣ bid is 22+ HCP. You want to extend the meaning of this bid fine, because my point was that a bid with this simple definition is dispensable.
jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
If your partnership just ignores the existence of 22+HCP hands, a bad score will hit you once in about a 1000 hands you play. My philosophy would be to accept that I get a bad score, and sometimes I get lucky and get to a decent spot on a different route.
jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
I could open 2NT and hope that partner will not pass or I could use a natural 3NT opening.
jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
If you reduce the SAYC opening criteria to HCP and suit length close to 41% of the hands you hold in 1rst seat fit one of them.
11.8% of all the hands you get in first seat have a 6 card suit and 5-11 HCP.
Of cause you would not open ♠KD ♥Txxxxx ♦xx ♣xx. I you give me your minimum requirements for a weak 2 I'll give you a better percentage.
#46
Posted 2008-November-04, 15:37
hotShot, on Nov 4 2008, 05:32 PM, said:
From the ACBL SAYC booklet:
Quote
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#47
Posted 2008-November-04, 15:52
hotShot, on Nov 4 2008, 04:32 PM, said:
jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
I think the standard definition of the SAYC 2♣ bid is 22+ HCP. You want to extend the meaning of this bid fine, because my point was that a bid with this simple definition is dispensable.
I don't want to do anything. 22+ is if you are balanced, unbalanced hands I believe SAYC says something like any hand WORTH 22+, which is invariably hands with less as a minimum.
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jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
If your partnership just ignores the existence of 22+HCP hands, a bad score will hit you once in about a 1000 hands you play. My philosophy would be to accept that I get a bad score, and sometimes I get lucky and get to a decent spot on a different route.
You are telling me if I play an NABC, 3 sessions a day for 11 days, my partnership is likely to open 2♣ exactly one time?? Sorry not buying it. In any case, your bad score will be a very bad score.
But this is all off point. You essentially implied that if you open 1 of something on a hand worth a 2♣ opener, the only hurdle you need to get past is partner replying to your bid. My response was that even if partner replies your troubles are far from over. It was only a response to what you were saying, so if you now want to reply "but this is a very rare situation", well that's not what I was responding to.
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jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
I could open 2NT and hope that partner will not pass or I could use a natural 3NT opening.
Now you also lose whatever you played a 3NT opening as on top of everything else.
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jdonn, on Nov 4 2008, 08:46 PM, said:
If you reduce the SAYC opening criteria to HCP and suit length close to 41% of the hands you hold in 1rst seat fit one of them.
11.8% of all the hands you get in first seat have a 6 card suit and 5-11 HCP.
Of cause you would not open ♠KD ♥Txxxxx ♦xx ♣xx. I you give me your minimum requirements for a weak 2 I'll give you a better percentage.
I would estimate it's more like half the 5-9 hands with a six card suit than all the 5-11 hands. Some have an awful suit, some have wild distribution, and some just aren't preemptive in nature.
This idea of having no forcing opening bid has been widely discredited for a long time. If you really want to free up 2♣ for something else, there are plenty of systems that let you do that and won't make you look foolish any time you have a good hand. Things more like precision, polish club, ....
#48
Posted 2008-November-04, 16:18
If this is true, then it doesn't really matter what you do on the strong hands. Hopefully you can handle them in some other manner which gets you a reasonable result.
I do not advocate doing away with the standard strong 2♣ opening bid; however, I can understand why someone would consider doing so.
An argument can be made for doing so at IMPs as well, but it is not as strong an argument. Frequency is sometimes overlooked at IMPs. There are times when it makes sense to risk a contract in search of an overtrick even at IMPs, at least on a probability basis. But you never see a "good player" taking such a risk. Besides, even if the chance of an overtrick worth one IMP is more than 12 times as likely as the chance of going down in a cold vulnerable game (risking 12 or 13 IMPs), you have to keep in mind that your ultimate goal is to win the match, not to extract each available IMP. If you lose by one IMP, then you will regret not going for the overtrick. But if you go down trying to gain that 1 IMP and, as a result, lose by somewhere between 2 and 12 IMPs, you will certainly regret that.
Pardon my digression.
#49
Posted 2008-November-04, 16:36
ArtK78, on Nov 4 2008, 10:18 PM, said:
Actually it is far from rare for "really good players" to do this.
About being able to live without a strong forcing opening bid...
I have noticed that most of the regular Forums posters have a tendency to open (and overcall for that matter) on light distributional hands.
In order to survive this style, it helps to drop the standards of what is needed for your 2C openings. That will increase the frequency of 2C openings. That will increase the number of IMPs you will lose by not having a 2C opening.
If you are seriously considering playing a system in which there is no forcing opening bid (not smart IMO and extremely not smart IMO unless you are already an excellent player or unless you don't care about ever becoming an excellent player) and if you also like to open light, you might want to think about this.
This may well be one of those situations where you can't have your cake and eat it too.
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
#50
Posted 2008-November-04, 20:06
ArtK78, on Nov 4 2008, 05:18 PM, said:
This is backwards. The marginal value (in win expectancy) of the last IMP won in a swing is decreasing with the size of the swing.
This is true in general, but might not be true for specific situations where you can predict the state of the match with some confidence.
Also, the above statement apples to KOs. Playing VPs the payoff function is a little different, when you're significantly behind you want bigger swings since the additional marginal IMPs are benefitting you in the part of the VP table where VPs/IMP is ~0.3, while the first few marginal IMPs are benefitting you in the part of the VP table where VPs/IMP < 0.2.
#51
Posted 2008-November-05, 15:35
hotShot, on Nov 4 2008, 01:22 PM, said:
The chances that a deal contains a hand with 22+ HCP is about 0.33%, about 1 in 300 boards.
Where do you get that from?
A single hand has 22+ hcp roughly 0,42% of the time according to the Encyclopedia.
Quote
Say you plan to open all 6322/6331, 7-10hcp, 6 clubs, with 2♣, the frequency of that hand type is
1/4 * 9,09% * 35,7% = 0,81%
based on the numbers in the encyclopedia.
You may disagree with the definition, but that is just details.
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It seems to me that we are talking something like 2:1 here, not 40:1.
For me it's not close. I'm positive that I would throw away much much more points on the strong hands without a strong 2♣ than I would be able to earn by a weak 2♣. It's not like a weak two is a magical recipe that ensures us a good board

#52
Posted 2008-November-05, 15:52
MFA, on Nov 5 2008, 04:35 PM, said:
hotShot, on Nov 4 2008, 01:22 PM, said:
The chances that a deal contains a hand with 22+ HCP is about 0.33%, about 1 in 300 boards.
Where do you get that from?
A single hand has 22+ hcp roughly 0,42% of the time according to the Encyclopedia.
0.33% of the time there are two or more hands in the deal that have 22+ HCP.
#53
Posted 2008-November-05, 16:05
matmat, on Nov 5 2008, 04:52 PM, said:
MFA, on Nov 5 2008, 04:35 PM, said:
hotShot, on Nov 4 2008, 01:22 PM, said:
The chances that a deal contains a hand with 22+ HCP is about 0.33%, about 1 in 300 boards.
Where do you get that from?
A single hand has 22+ hcp roughly 0,42% of the time according to the Encyclopedia.
0.33% of the time there are two or more hands in the deal that have 22+ HCP.
Huh?

#54
Posted 2008-November-05, 16:38
- hrothgar
#55
Posted 2008-November-05, 17:17
#56
Posted 2008-November-05, 17:23
jtfanclub, on Nov 5 2008, 06:17 PM, said:
Naturally, the chance partner has game in hand is not nearly the only advantage of responding on those hands. Also for goodness sake how many times does it have to be said, it's more hands than 22+ hcp that open 2♣!
#57
Posted 2008-November-05, 17:27
- hrothgar
#58
Posted 2008-November-05, 18:21
jdonn, on Nov 5 2008, 07:23 PM, said:
Well actually you should have said it once less (for goodness sake), since here we are talking about Fantunes one bids (which promise goodness)
#59
Posted 2008-November-06, 01:35
jtfanclub, on Nov 6 2008, 08:17 AM, said:
I think this reasoning is wrong.
Say, partner opens a fantunes 1 Diamond and your right hand opponent pass. You look at a near yarborough. How great is the chance, that partner has the monster? Surely much bigger then 0.44 %. So I doubt that passing in this situation is winning bridge.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#60
Posted 2008-November-06, 02:14