rhm, on 2014-June-11, 07:20, said:
May I ask:
How often do you hear the bidding go
1NT Pass 3NT AP
When did you last hear the bidding go
1NT Pass 3NT DBL
The first sequence I usually hear several times per session
I can not remember when I last had the second sequence. Definitely not in the last ten tournaments I played in. I am not claiming that it does never occur though.
You are severely overestimating the statistical impact those hands will have on the overall result whether you exclude them or not.
Rainer Herrmann
I was definitely wrong about this since we have the ten of spades, it makes it almost impossible partner will have a double, and also since we have 6 HCP. That said I have actually seen this auction twice in my last ten tournaments, once by my partner and once by my opp, both world class players. I will admit it has almost no relevance when we have this particular hand and I was wrong, sorry. That said, I think your analysis of "it rarely goes 1N p 3N X and it often goes 1N P 3N AP" is faulty, it is also rare we are beating them on a spade lead (or any lead) on 1N P 3N, we must consider the hands where a spade lead will beat it, and how many of those partner would have doubled. If partner is doubling .5 % of the time overall, but on all of those he wants a spade lead and a spade lead beats it, that would elminate 5 of the 125 hands where a spade lead is right according to your simulation which is something. That said given that we have the ST and 6 HCP it is unlikely that is the case so I withdraw that argument.
Quote
I also can not remember when I last transferred into a minor and then showed a singleton in a major over 1NT, even though I play that way over 1NT.
This however I am just going to say shows that you are consistently not bidding well, or at least bidding abnormally, assuming you are implying you don't use that bid rather than that it never comes up. I do not know the last time I saw a good player bid 1N 3N with a singleton in a major at imps. Why play methods where you can show every hand that has a singleton in a major if you are going to not show it? It strikes me as completely gambling for little gain to not show it, any hand with a stiff in a major could obviously belong in 5m or 4M and people who claim they don't want to "give away the lead" are just masterminding in my opinion, if the opponents have a long and strong major between them they are very likely to lead it on 1N 3N anyways, and if they don't have length/strength there you're going to get to 3N anyways since partner will bid it.
Even if you do not show your singletons ever I do not think that is a majority action and I think it is likely to be statistically relevant that you chose to include those hands. As far as I can tell you allowed 5-5 in the minors, 6/7 card minors and short majors, and (13)(54) hand types. Those hand types combined do come up every single tournament that I play, they are not some irrelevant thing. And of course including them will favor leading spades over diamonds.