helene_t, on 2012-June-22, 02:07, said:
But the whole problem with Banzai is that the number of tricks taken in your hand in the particular suite is not everything.
See below.
gwnn, on 2012-June-22, 02:49, said:
Yes, Helene, but if you haven't read the book then you are not allowed to use reason, mathematics, logistic regression, anything. In fact if you haven't read the book you are not even allowed to post anything. Playing bridge is allowed but you will almost surely fail.
Your sarcasm is dripping all over the floor. Better clean it up.
mgoetze, on 2012-June-22, 05:27, said:
How do you take 8 tricks with this hand?
Let's try a different tack.
Your hand: Axxx Axx Ax Axxx
Partner's hand: x xx KQJxxxxx xx
How many tricks is your hand "worth"?
My hand is worth four tricks.
Partner's hand is worth six or seven tricks, if he can ever get back in after knocking out the A and maybe the ten. It might be worth
no tricks.
Our hands together are worth 11 tricks. If your point is that it's the tricks the two hands together can take that's important, I agree. But I don't see how Work does a better job at that than Banzai does. Seems to me they both have the same flaws in this respect.
If somebody suggested that 5-4-3-2-1 is a better scheme than 4-3-2-1-0 or 4-3-2-1-1/2, and didn't tell you that those numbers are based on an analysis that doesn't take into account whole hands, would you all still be so negative about it? For that matter, did the analysis on which Work is based (
was there such an analysis?) take into account whole hands?