What is proper Your hand is sorted when you pick it up
#1
Posted 2008-February-02, 10:44
What would you do?
#2 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-02, 10:48
#3
Posted 2008-February-02, 10:53
Anyway, I would just ignore it, you never know why it is sorted. Some players always sort their cards after playing them.
#4 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-02, 10:59
helene_t, on Feb 2 2008, 11:53 AM, said:
Would this view change if it was a pair game?
#5
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:08
Harald
#6
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:14
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 06:59 PM, said:
helene_t, on Feb 2 2008, 11:53 AM, said:
Would this view change if it was a pair game?
probably yes. have not seen it discussed anywhere, though.
#7
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:17
#8 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:24
EricK, on Feb 2 2008, 12:17 PM, said:
Yes, and they were discussing it because there was something interesting about it.
There are a ton of examples where this UI will come into play. For example:
You get to a normal 4S and it looks cold. Better take more time to plan how to cope with a 5-0 trump split, because it is almost surely coming.
You have the auction come up 1H X 4H 4S p. You should probably make a slam try since it is cold, but very difficult to bid since you have few HCP.
etc etc. It is very naive to think this doesn't give people UI imo.
#9 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:27
helene_t, on Feb 2 2008, 12:14 PM, said:
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 06:59 PM, said:
helene_t, on Feb 2 2008, 11:53 AM, said:
Would this view change if it was a pair game?
probably yes. have not seen it discussed anywhere, though.
Me neither, I actually like the thought of "it's AI in a knockout" though, your opponents shouldn't be stupid enough to not shuffle their cards up.
#10
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:46
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 09:27 AM, said:
helene_t, on Feb 2 2008, 12:14 PM, said:
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 06:59 PM, said:
helene_t, on Feb 2 2008, 11:53 AM, said:
Would this view change if it was a pair game?
probably yes. have not seen it discussed anywhere, though.
Me neither, I actually like the thought of "it's AI in a knockout" though, your opponents shouldn't be stupid enough to not shuffle their cards up.
They were stupid enough not to shuffle.
My partner held this hand. I won't say what he did in public.
Personally, I think this is akin to picking up a strong hand in a pairs game after earlier hearing "wow, 7N" at another table 30 minutes earlier.
#11
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:48
On the theory that there's nothing new under the sun, it can't hurt to take out insurance against this sort of thing by not letting your opponents know your hand arrived arranged. And I suppose if it happened several times, it would be proper to inform the director, although this is the sort of thing that's very hard for the director do do anything about. Am I getting cynical in my old age? Maybe.
#12
Posted 2008-February-02, 11:51
pclayton, on Feb 2 2008, 12:46 PM, said:
I can't resist repeating one of the funniest ethical problem jokes I can remember. Pair game, 2 board rounds. On the first board, EW bid something like 1♠-3♠-6♠ on a ridiculous hand and go down. On the second board, NS bid something like 1♠-3♠ and the 1♠ opener calls the director: "Can I bid a slam on my opponent's wire?"
#13
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:00
A player wanted to show his hand to his partner afterwards either to give a lesson, to show that it was just like a hand he held last week, as part of some stupid comment made at the table (look, 4333 again!) etc etc etc
This was board 11, and on board 12 the player accidentally took out this hand again, sorted it, then realized it was the same one he just played and quickly put it back.
His partner wanted to look at it to see what the opponents could make, or his side could make in something else.
The opponents wanted to look at it to see what their side or the other side could make.
How about this one...it's a coincidence! I know the odds are astronomically low, but it's as likely an order for your cards to randomly be as any other order.
I think if you try to read anything into it at the table then you are wasting brain cells.
#14 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:08
jdonn, on Feb 2 2008, 01:00 PM, said:
lol, are u serious?
OK, question to a math person, how many hands would you have to play for this to have a 5 % chance of occurring?
#15
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:15
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 08:08 PM, said:
jdonn, on Feb 2 2008, 01:00 PM, said:
lol, are u serious?
OK, question to a math person, how many hands would you have to play for this to have a 5 % chance of occurring?
A hand without a singleton can be "sorted" in 384 ways (assuming each suit may be ascending or descending), while the total number of permutations is 6227020800. So the answer to your question is approximately one million.
#16
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:18
Seems to me that regardless of UI or AI, a comment to a director is in order.
Aaron
#17
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:37
helene_t, on Feb 3 2008, 07:15 AM, said:
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 08:08 PM, said:
jdonn, on Feb 2 2008, 01:00 PM, said:
lol, are u serious?
OK, question to a math person, how many hands would you have to play for this to have a 5 % chance of occurring?
A hand without a singleton can be "sorted" in 384 ways (assuming each suit may be ascending or descending), while the total number of permutations is 6227020800. So the answer to your question is approximately one million.
Interesting assumption.
I virtually never sort the cards in each suit into rank order. So a sorted hand that came from me might look like:
♠ 2 K 5 7 ♥ Q 6 8 ♦ 5 9 A ♣ 10 8 2
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#18
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:44
Jlall, on Feb 2 2008, 01:08 PM, said:
jdonn, on Feb 2 2008, 01:00 PM, said:
lol, are u serious?
OK, question to a math person, how many hands would you have to play for this to have a 5 % chance of occurring?
Before you bring it to a math person, get the question right! There are literally hundreds or even thousands of orders the cards in your hand can be where it looks like the hand is sorted, and probably tens of thousands more where the order looks somehow coincidental. It's not 1 out of whatever that you will think something is up when it was really random, it's probably like 25,000 out of whatever or something like that. Probably even more than that, I mean if 12 cards were sorted and one was just in a random spot, wouldn't that be the same thing to you?
Does any of this even matter? It could be any of the other reasons I suggested, or more. There is no way a sorted hand means you are getting a 7-0 break or should overbid by three tricks.
#19
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:47
#20 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-02, 12:51

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