jogs, on 2014-November-05, 12:50, said:
Use our tricks
E(tricks) = trumps + (HCP-20)/3
Notice with 9 trumps, one can bid game with 22 points. An additional trump is worth an additional trick.
E(tricks) = trumps + (HCP-20)/3 + SST
You can use SST to adjust the estimates both up and down. You know your hand's contribution to SST. Sometimes you can deduce partner's.
This is just silly. Yes, there are hands on which we can, should, and do bid games on 22 hcp (or less, haven't we all bid and made slams on 15 counts or less..admittedly usually as a save that happens to make!) but that doesn't mean that we should always be bidding major suit games on 9 card fits every time we hold a combined 22 count.
Bridge valuation is a fuzzy process. I accept that in theory it ought to be possible to come up with a mathematical approach that does better than the best judgment of the best players in the world. After all, in chess it is now accepted that the best software running on the best computer will trounce the best human players.
The problem is that we humans are not capable of being able to apply such a 'perfect' or 'near-perfect' mathematical model. We can't hold the parameters or equations in our heads (if one ever figured out what they would be) and we can't crunch the numbers unaided, or in a realistic playing time.
Meanwhile, focusing on some bits of what an ultimate theory would encompass, while ignoring other just as important bits, is an exercise in futility.
When we ascertain, or assume, that we have 22 combined hcp and a 9 card fit, we look at where the cards are, and what they are. We upgrade for the presence of 9's and 10's in our long suits. We upgrade for honours in our long suits, but downgrade the J in the 9+ suit, since it may be redundant. We downgrade Queens and Jacks in short suits. We look kindly on Aces, somewhat also on Kings.
We pay attention to the bidding by the opps, including passes on occasion.
We weigh the merits of exploratory bidding, which informs the opps as well as partner, against the merits of blasting (or passing low).
We weigh our partnership style. We weigh the state of the match, and the relative strengths of our teams, if playing a head-to-head team game. We look at the vulnerability.
Even if we could build an effective set of equations that would include all of these factors, and correctly assign weights to them, which probably vary between every hand and every match, we couldn't possibly come up with a method that a human could play at the table.
Which means that what we need to develop is a series of methods that are relatively easy to use, and offer reasonable approximations, and then synthesize, through experience, discussion with better players, and so on, what will largely be an unconscious analytical approach.
By spending so much attention on narrow aspects of this process you run the risk of being able to count the leaves on an individual tree while having very little idea of what the forest looks like....when it is the forest that concerns you, not the tree you are staring at so intently.
I can tell you, for example, that when I am playing well, what I note mostly about my successful aggressive auctions and decisions is that I 'like' or 'dislike' my hand. Of course, I will think carefully about the various factors I listed above, but the single most important criterion is how I feel about the hand...do I like it or dislike it? In my opinion, that feeling, when I am 'on', is the result of an unconscious synthesis of a lot of little bits of information. It's called judgment, and we all have it to some degree.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari