awm, on Sep 8 2005, 06:57 PM, said:
6331 (14 zar) is much better than 4441 (11 zar)
7222 (14 zar) is roughly equivalent to 5440 (14 zar)
Now obviously these will be adjusted up or down when you find (or fail to find) a fit. But it seems like the initial evaluation should roughly measure the average or expected value of the hands. If some particular pattern almost always finds a fit and always gets huge upgrades after the fit is found, it seems reasonable to assume that the initial valuation of that hand is probably too low.
The funny thing is, 5440 distribution seems to be very powerful. From Tysen's data, it seems like 5440 is much more likely to find a game than 7222 or 6331. Shouldn't the initial evaluation reflect this?
The data are of course very interesting, but things are a bit more subtle. The 7222 has a higher degree of safety than the 5440 hand (and can thus open lighter in the "how often do we make game" metric). After you find a fit, everything changes, but I'd suggest that (to some extent) upgrading when you find a fit is better than having to downgrade when you don't find one. Not that "safety" should be the sole factor either -- what I'm suggesting is that both "how often game" and "safety" factor into your openings (read: initial valuation?).
Andy