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Opening on junk Which of these (13 point - ugh!) hands do you open?

Poll: Which do you open? (65 member(s) have cast votes)

Which of the following hands do you open?

  1. All of them (54 votes [83.08%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 83.08%

  2. A, B (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  3. A, C (1 votes [1.54%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 1.54%

  4. B, C (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  5. only A (3 votes [4.62%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 4.62%

  6. only B (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  7. only C (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  8. none (7 votes [10.77%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 10.77%

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#61 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 11:40

View PostRedSpawn, on 2017-March-29, 11:11, said:

That is why you routinely try to underbid by two tricks afterwards to offset the potential impact of said misrepresentation (lie).

You are essentially writing a check with insufficient funds and are hoping that no one will ever be smart enough to cash your check before the auction ends.


That makes sense. In the future I will underbid by 3 tricks.
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#62 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 15:19

Thomas Andrews' brilliant articles on Hand Evaluation (Binky points) based on double-dummy simulation
For no-trump contracts A = 4, K = 2.8, Q = 1.8, J = 1, T = 0.4
Kings and queens are overvalued but notice the importance of knaves and tens and be aware of Thomas's caveats.

My father, Charles Guthrie, devised Winners as an alternative crude but simple evaluation method (now modified by Thomas Andrews' ideas),
A = 1.5, K = 1, Q = 0.5, J = 0.2 T = 0.1. (We used to ignore knaves and tens).
Doubleton = 0.5, Singleton = 1.5, void = 2.5 (revised from 1, 2, 3, respectively).
Trump control = 1.
Results are similar to the LTC (although arrived at by addition rather than subtraction).
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#63 User is offline   Kaitlyn S 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 22:40

View PostAlroy, on 2017-March-25, 16:40, said:

Open them all. Only wimps and people over 70 would pass any or all of these hands!! I doubt very much mechwell or welland/auken would pass any of these hands.
Don't Meckwell play Precision? Of course, this is a sound opening for Precision players who wouldn't dream of passing an 11-count protected by their system's low upper limit. I was asking in the context of using standard methods (and strong notrump.) Of course, I should have made this clear.
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#64 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2017-March-29, 23:17

View PostKaitlyn S, on 2017-March-29, 22:40, said:

Don't Meckwell play Precision? Of course, this is a sound opening for Precision players who wouldn't dream of passing an 11-count protected by their system's low upper limit. I was asking in the context of using standard methods (and strong notrump.) Of course, I should have made this clear.

Now we are back to tautologies and truisms:

If you play unmodified SAYC or any system that, by definition, cannot normally cope with light openers then, by and large, you should restrict such openings to contexts, in which the system makes specific provision. e.g. 3rd in hand with 2-way Drury. Also partner should be aware of such possibilities.

Alternatively, if you agree to open light, then you can try to cope by modifying your traditional methods e.g.
  • Change your opening bid structure, 1N = 15-17 BAL. 1 = s or 18-19 BAL. 1 = s or 11-14 BAL.
  • Change your response structure e,g, after partner opens 1, 2 = ART F1. 2 = TRF 5+ s. 2 = TRF good 3 card raise. 2 = NAT PRE.
  • Gazzilli and XYZ (or transfers) everywhere.

Using modified Acol, the Hacket twins have opened light, successfully, for decades.
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#65 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2017-March-30, 07:26

View Postnige1, on 2017-March-29, 23:17, said:

Using modified Acol, the Hacket twins have opened light, successfully, for decades.


How light is light.
Even if you open "light" most will agree you need a floor, below which you will only go in exceptional circumstances (e.g psyche etc).

Quote:
How light is too light for a 1-bid in (a) Precision (b) Standard?
Answer
Openings need to be sounder in Standard because it just gets too wide range. Opening the bidding a built in advantage, all your bidding tools now working for you. In Precision, nothing special 10 counts is too light. You need Shape or nice cards to open the 10's.

This answer was given yesterday by Meckstroth

see http://bridgewinners...eff-meckstroth/

Further down the same link:

Quote
What do minimum strength Meckwell Precision 1D openers look like third seat white on red?
Answer
I have to say whatever we feel like doing at the time. Not going to go far down this path. I will say we pass a lot more now when we have crap.

Rainer Herrmann
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#66 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2017-March-30, 07:37

View Postjohnu, on 2017-March-27, 12:01, said:

While deciding to open this hand is done without knowing the other hands, the fact that you have all or most of the queens and jacks in your pile of quacks allows you to make some assumptions about what points responder will have, namely that they will have (most) all their points in kings and aces. This tends to balance out the overvaluing of the opening hand.

This is a common fallacy.
It is of course true but trivial that the quacks you have can not be held by any other hand.
What matters is whether you have preponderance of lower honors and a lack of aces of first round controls or vice versa in both hands combined.
When do you think these scenarios, say a preponderance of quacks will happen in both hands?
When you are staring yourself in a preponderance of quacks or when you are staring at a preponderance of aces?
Nothing balances out unless you hold all 40 HCP in both hands together.

The only way to get this right is if both sides value their hand properly.

Rainer Herrmann
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#67 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2017-April-02, 01:26

I can't see any of the example hand being passed in an expert event.
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#68 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-April-02, 13:18

.
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#69 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2017-April-02, 14:03

View Postrhm, on 2017-March-30, 07:26, said:

How light is light.
Even if you open "light" most will agree you need a floor, below which you will only go in exceptional circumstances (e.g psyche etc).

Quote:
How light is too light for a 1-bid in (a) Precision (b) Standard?
Answer
Openings need to be sounder in Standard because it just gets too wide range. Opening the bidding a built in advantage, all your bidding tools now working for you. In Precision, nothing special 10 counts is too light. You need Shape or nice cards to open the 10's.

This answer was given yesterday by Meckstroth

see http://bridgewinners...eff-meckstroth/

Further down the same link:

Quote
What do minimum strength Meckwell Precision 1D openers look like third seat white on red?
Answer
I have to say whatever we feel like doing at the time. Not going to go far down this path. I will say we pass a lot more now when we have crap.

Rainer Herrmann


You are flailing and I would toss you a Lifesaver but I only have Altoids.

Meckstroth is talking about frequently (or not) opening random/bad 10 counts. The hands being discussed in this thread are 13 HCP hands. Even if you think the point count system overvalues them, there is a huge difference between a bad 10 count and these bad 13 counts.

As far as the 1 comment, since 1 is artificial in Meckwell, you are supposed to have a minimum 10 HCP in the ACBL. Many would rule that < 10 HCP makes it an illegal bid. I won't rehash the Spain-USA controversy about psyching artificial 1 openers in 3rd seat. This does not support your position in any way.
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#70 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2017-April-02, 14:09

View Postrhm, on 2017-March-30, 07:37, said:

This is a common fallacy.
It is of course true but trivial that the quacks you have can not be held by any other hand.


How can it be a fallacy if it is true? The point is, if partner bids game, they've got an opening hand filled with aces and kings. If they ask whether you are minimum or maximum for you bid, you answer minimum.
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#71 User is offline   fred 

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Posted 2017-April-02, 14:32

There are definitely many very strong players who play natural systems who would Pass some or all of these hands in at least some vulnerability/dealer combinations (including some who play weak notrump).

I believe that there exist some very strong Precision players who would at least consider Passing in some vulnerability/dealer combinations. I can tell you for sure that, contrary to popular belief, it is far from rare for some of the best Precision players in the USA to Pass hands with 11 (or even 12) HCPs in some circumstances. Yes I know these hands, on paper at least, have more than 11 HCPs.

Some things to learn from this:

- as others have suggested, following point count religiously is very much not a recipe for success.
- vulnerability and position are extremely important as far as such issues are concerned. The form of scoring and state of the match can also be relevant.
- do not listen to anyone who claims with authority that they *know* it is right to open (or not to open). Nobody knows and IMO simulations regarding such things should not be taken seriously.

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#72 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-April-02, 14:38

View Postjohnu, on 2017-April-02, 14:03, said:

You are flailing and I would toss you a Lifesaver but I only have Altoids.

Meckstroth is talking about frequently (or not) opening random/bad 10 counts. The hands being discussed in this thread are 13 HCP hands. Even if you think the point count system overvalues them, there is a huge difference between a bad 10 count and these bad 13 counts.

As far as the 1 comment, since 1 is artificial in Meckwell, you are supposed to have a minimum 10 HCP in the ACBL. Many would rule that < 10 HCP makes it an illegal bid. I won't rehash the Spain-USA controversy about psyching artificial 1 openers in 3rd seat. This does not support your position in any way.


Are you reading or skim-reading the postings?

Meckstroth says,

"Openings need to be sounder in Standard because it just gets too wide a range. Opening the bidding has a built in advantage, all your bidding tools are now working for you."

Kaitlyn S' questions about junk hands were geared for players who bid SAYC 15-17 = 1NT.

So....why do you think that a hand with 0.0 to 0.5 quick trick qualifies as a 1-level "sounder opening in Standard"?

Walk me through this BBO voodoo logic -- especially when the hand in question, (QJX, QJX, QJX, QJXX), is the functional equivalent of a 8-9 HCP hand. <_<

http://www.jeff-gold...JX+QJX+QJX+QJXX
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#73 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2017-April-03, 19:02

View Postfred, on 2017-April-02, 14:32, said:

Some things to learn from this:
- as others have suggested, following point count religiously is very much not a recipe for success.
- vulnerability and position are extremely important as far as such issues are concerned. The form of scoring and state of the match can also be relevant.
- do not listen to anyone who claims with authority that they *know* it is right to open (or not to open). Nobody knows and IMO simulations regarding such things should not be taken seriously.

IMO
  • We should be wary of light openers unless partner expects them and our system has been designed of modified to cope.
  • HCP is a crude measure of high card strength. Augmented by considerations of honour placement, shape, texture and fit, it's still a crude measure of trick-taking potential. But until we develop sophisticated judgement, if ever, it has the advantage of simplicity and some limited effectiveness.
  • Expert judgement of the influence of vulnerability, position, form of scoring, state of match, and so on are similarly important. But beyond current abilities of most players.
  • When deciding whether to open the bidding on marginal values, we must come to a decision, even if no authority "knows" the right answer.
  • We should probably give less weight to an individual opinion, than to real-life high-level statistics, computer simulations (not necessarily double-dummy), and the actual practice of most top players.

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#74 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2017-April-07, 05:42

View Postrhm, on 2017-March-30, 07:26, said:

How light is light.
Even if you open "light" most will agree you need a floor, below which you will only go in exceptional circumstances (e.g psyche etc).

Quote:
How light is too light for a 1-bid in (a) Precision (b) Standard?
Answer
Openings need to be sounder in Standard because it just gets too wide range. Opening the bidding a built in advantage, all your bidding tools now working for you. In Precision, nothing special 10 counts is too light. You need Shape or nice cards to open the 10's.

This answer was given yesterday by Meckstroth

see http://bridgewinners...eff-meckstroth/

Further down the same link:

Quote
What do minimum strength Meckwell Precision 1D openers look like third seat white on red?
Answer
I have to say whatever we feel like doing at the time. Not going to go far down this path. I will say we pass a lot more now when we have crap.

Rainer Herrmann


The Hackett twins did not play modified Acol. They played a variant of the Science.
"The King of Hearts a broadsword bears, the Queen of Hearts a rose." W. H. Auden.
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#75 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2017-April-07, 09:06

View PostRedSpawn, on 2017-April-02, 14:38, said:

Kaitlyn S' questions about junk hands were geared for players who bid SAYC 15-17 = 1NT.

Kaitlyn (downthread) said her questions were geared for standard methods, not SAYC. SAYC, a restricted system, indeed does not have the tools referred to by Meck in RedSpawn's reference; but 'standard methods' as a whole can easily have tools to cope with lighter openings.

So, Meck's opinions are relevant to this discussion. Now for the blasphemy: I dare to disagree with Meck. We have found that light openings, although they increase an already wide range for the natural opening bids, are still quite workable as long as we don't fall into the Modern Paradox.

The Modern Paradox was coined by a Canadian author reporting on a Canadian championship in the ACBL Bulletin several years ago. As opening bids got lighter, responders have not increased their requirements for game and slam probes proportionately. For instance, Kx AJxx Axxx xxx is a game invite, not a game force opposite a Modern 1m or 1s.
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#76 User is offline   Phil 

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Posted 2017-April-08, 11:04

View Postfred, on 2017-April-02, 14:32, said:


I believe that there exist some very strong Precision players who would at least consider Passing in some vulnerability/dealer combinations. I can tell you for sure that, contrary to popular belief, it is far from rare for some of the best Precision players in the USA to Pass hands with 11 (or even 12) HCPs in some circumstances. Yes I know these hands, on paper at least, have more than 11 HCPs.


If the vugraph archive is searchable, it would be a good exercise to look for 1st and 2nd seat 1m openers of 11-12 that are being passed. My estimate, at least in late stages, that 12's are passed around .1% of the time and 11's are passed 5% of the time.
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#77 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2017-April-08, 21:49

View PostPhil, on 2017-April-08, 11:04, said:

If the vugraph archive is searchable, it would be a good exercise to look for 1st and 2nd seat 1m openers of 11-12 that are being passed. My estimate, at least in late stages, that 12's are passed around .1% of the time and 11's are passed 5% of the time.

It would be a good exercise if we only included balanced 11-12's.
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#78 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2017-April-09, 03:36

View Postaguahombre, on 2017-April-07, 09:06, said:

So, Meck's opinions are relevant to this discussion. Now for the blasphemy: I dare to disagree with Meck. We have found that light openings, although they increase an already wide range for the natural opening bids, are still quite workable as long as we don't fall into the Modern Paradox.

The Modern Paradox was coined by a Canadian author reporting on a Canadian championship in the ACBL Bulletin several years ago. As opening bids got lighter, responders have not increased their requirements for game and slam probes proportionately. For instance, Kx AJxx Axxx xxx is a game invite, not a game force opposite a Modern 1m or 1s.

I think is is not so easy to play a system where responder needs significant more than half of the partnership resources before he should consider forcing to game.
The trend in modern constructive bidding system is to force to game early. This makes it easier to find the best strain for game or to judge whether all the ingredients for slam are present or not.
For example in 2/1 you have to decide early whether you have sufficient resources.
The same holds true when you employ XYZ or similar conventions.
Once responder needs significantly more than a minimum opening bid himself he will often not be able to force to game and the above advantage gets lost.
Meanwhile if champions have difficulty to adjust why are you not beating all those if it is so easy for you?

There may be many tactical advantages for light and super-light openings but do not tell us it is easy to adjust and there are no costs involved.

Rainer Herrmann
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#79 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2017-April-09, 04:29

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

I think is is not so easy to play a system where responder needs significant more than half of the partnership resources before he should consider forcing to game.

Agree :(

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

The trend in modern constructive bidding system is to force to game early. This makes it easier to find the best strain for game or to judge whether all the ingredients for slam are present or not. For example in 2/1 you have to decide early whether you have sufficient resources

Conventions like Gazzillli can mitigate the problem :)

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

The same holds true when you employ XYZ or similar conventions.

XYZ is an appropriate kind of convention because you quickly categorise your hand as Sign/Off, INVitational, or Game-Forcing :)

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

Once responder needs significantly more than a minimum opening bid himself he will often not be able to force to game and the above advantage gets lost.

Agree. :(

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

Meanwhile if champions have difficulty to adjust why are you not beating all those if it is so easy for you?

Many champions seem to have adjusted :)

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

There may be many tactical advantages for light and super-light openings

We concede there are disadvantages too :( It's swings :( and roundabouts :)

View Postrhm, on 2017-April-09, 03:36, said:

but do not tell us it is easy to adjust and there are no costs involved.

We don't :)
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#80 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2017-April-09, 08:26

Good job, nige. And to RHM: I didn't say anything was easy. I said it was workable.

Further, I didn't say champions have difficulty adjusting; I said many people don't adjust their responses per the Modern Paradox. This causes them problems. And, I believe if Meck were not using a forcing club system he would make the appropriate adjustments and still win an event or two.

"Why don't you beat...?" -- not worth taking that bait. I must not have anything worthwhile to contribute -- even while giving credit for the concept to someone else -- unless I first have improved all aspects of my game to world class standards and then play against those folks on a regular basis? (Edit: I guess I did take the bait.)
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