Miron, on Apr 28 2006, 02:50 AM, said:
I've read this thread. And if I got it right:
On the fourth seath open, even weak hands without spades.
Is it this way?
Thanx
The short answer is, yes, this data suggest opening light hands in 4th seat rather or not you hold some number of spades.
The long answer has to do with being able to read the data on that table shown on the Bid Analysis tool (the graphic in the post above yours) can be difficult to grasp at first. If you look at it you will see a table, the first column of which is a labelled "bid" just above the white area... from Pass then dbl, rdbl, 1C, 1D, 1H all the way to 7NT. The next six columns are for when someone "bids". The second column is "labelled" open (for opener). Here SFBP forced the opener to open with pass, so it should probably be labelled dealer as that is the case in this example. You will see that pass by dealer (with the other requirements of his search) totalled 28,858. And you will see no dealer opened 1
♣ (the 0 in the row labeled 1
♣ under the "open" column, and similar 0's for all other bids (other than pass). This is because the search criteria FORCED delearer to pass.
The third and 4th columns are for hand after dealer and then dealer's partner. Again the search criteria only found hands where these hands passed. So it is the same 28,858 hands and they all pass (in addition to the first three hands passing, the fourh hand had to hold EXACTLY 2 spades, and EXACTLY 12 hcp... so out of 23 million hands, the auction went pass=pass=pass 28,858 times WHEN the 4th hand had both 12 hcp and 2 spades).
What the first three bids where was controlled by the search parameters, they had to be pass of the hands were not "found". However, what the fourth hand bids with his 12 hcp and 2
♠'s was not controlled. So you see some people "passed" (in fact, 5947 people passed the hand out). But now you see some people opened 1
♣ (in fact, 7,333 times), some 1
♦ (9,799), etc. Even one person opened 1
♠ on his doubleton
♠.
Now what isn't obvious in this table at first gkance is how to tell what different bids (left hand row) in different seats (top of the columns) earned. Above the columns is a "slider". Basically this is an arrow that points to one column of the other (it is in the narrow white area above the headers to each column), Currently the slider is pointing at "Adv", Adv stands for "advancer". In bidding, the terms opener, overcaller, responder, advancer refer to the four seats in this example, opener means "dealer" so advancer (adv) means 4th seat. With the slider pointing to advancer, it means the numbers in "aveMP" (average mp score) and "aveIMP" (meaning average imp score) is what the the bid displayed for "advancer" earned. In the rows next to average imps and average MP is rows labeled "# MP" and "# IMP", this referres to the number of hands figuring into the average imps and average mp hands.
So for example, only one person opened 1
♠ on in 4th seat on the doubleton spade. IF we look down the row entitled "ave IMP", we see the opening of 1
♠ averaged -1.70 imps, and we see 1 in the number of imp hands that were opened 1
♠ (that was this one psyche or mositio opening), For average mp, we see 50.00 but we also see there where no MP hands where 1
♠ was opened, explainig the 50.00 (you get 0 average for imps if no hands, and 50.00 for mp if no hands).
Having seen how this works, you can look at hands where the 4th seat passed... you see out of nearly 6000 hands (5947 to be exact) the results for passing out was not very good. This hand pattern (12 hcp, 2 spades) was passed out at imps a total of 3,179 times and passing earned (on average), -0.79 imps. At matchpoints, pass out occured 2768 times, for an average of 44.41 matchpoints.
By comparison, you can look to see how bidding did, by opening bid, opening 1C, 1D, 1H, 1NT all did better than passing. The full table also show the averages for opening 2C throuigh 7NT.
A few other things can be done, the slider can be moved over the columns that say "CtrOS" and "CtrNO". These stand for "contract opening side", and "contract non-opening side". If you move the slider, you the averages in the average imp and average MP columns will change to correspond with where the slider is.
In this example, opening side was the "dealer" so we see a large number of contracts for the "non-opening side" compared to the opening side, for instance, 1NT was played 2460 times by 4th seats side compared to only 155 times by the dealer side (after starting with 3 passes). We can not see from the "static" table (the screen capture) how well or poorly 1NT did. The number shown in the column are for 1NT opening bids by 4th seat with 12 hcp. However, using bridgebrowser you could move the slider over the CtrNO and then read off how 1NT did. If you had been able to move the slider over, you would have seen that 1NT averaged 0.65 imps and 58.98 matchpoints for the 4th seat side. If the opener's side played 1NT, they did much worse, averaging 0.09 imps and 49.55 matchpoints.
You can go further is you want. You can figure out, using other bridge browser tools such as the "hand stats" function for example that 4th seat playing in 1NT averaged 7.17 tricks at imps, and 7.36 tricks at MP and that their average hcp total was 21.15 and 21.09 when they played in exactly 1NT. Or you can figure out how many hcp they averaged as a team when they took 6 tricks, 7 trick, 8 tricks, 9 tricks. etc
6 tricks = (494 times) 20.60 and 20.79
7 tricks = (768 times) 21.01 and 21.03
8 tricks = (655 times) 21.69 and 21.27
9 tricks = (399 times) 21.92 and 21.47
The actual range of tricks playing in 1NT after opening in 4th seat with 12 hcp and 2 spades was from 1 tricks to 11 tricks. Obviously taking as few as 1 to 4 or as many as 11 were very rare events. Playing in 1NT 4th seat took only 1 trick once (at matchpoints), took 2 tricks only once (at imps), took 3 tricks only 7 times, and took 11 tricks only 7 times. So these extremes were only 0.6% (less than 1%) off all the 1NT contracts.
Or you can examine individual hands, for example if you "clck" on that "one" for the hand that opened 1
♠ in fourth chair it will call up not only that hand where the 1
♠ was bid, but also all the duplicates of that hands where some other (more reasonable) bid was made and inspect each one if you like.
Ben