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But what makes a good psyche?

#1 User is offline   dicklont 

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Posted 2008-August-18, 04:49

Everybodes agrees that bidding 1 holding 8753 752 873 962 in first seat is a bad psyche.

But what makes a good psychic bid?
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Finding your own mistakes is more productive than looking for partner's. It improves your game and is good for your soul. (Nige1)
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#2 User is offline   hotShot 

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Posted 2008-August-18, 05:09

You harm opps more than your partner.
You have some control over the auction.
You have a "save spot" to play.

Lets take a classic:
Opening strong 1NT with:
xxx xxx - KQTxxxx

You can handle almost any response partner can make:
pass over 2 Stayman
execute transfer and play the 5-3 major fit
and if partner passes or opps dbl you can run to 2/3.
If 3 is transfer to you can even handle that.
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#3 User is offline   SoTired 

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Posted 2008-August-18, 05:15

The best psyches are one shot deals: Either it works immediately or it does not. If nobody looks at your hand, they may not know you psyched.

psyches risk 2 things: The obvious risk is the current hand. The less obvious risk is all future hands where partner may hesitate believing you when sometimes it seems you are playing with a pinocle deck.

No question psyches are fun when they work. B/I consider psyches cheating.

IMO, an expert psyching against a B/I is unethical.

This was not the stupidest psyche I have ever seen. Opening weak 2 in 3rd seat on Jxxx and out and then blaming partner when partner bid aggressively on 10 HCP and Kxxx support.
It costs nothing to be nice -- my better half
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#4 User is offline   brianshark 

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Posted 2008-August-18, 08:58

Psyching a cue-bid in a suit you don't want led, usually against a slam, is one that is used quite often.

More risky but often effective is faking a suit on the way to 3NT to avert a lead in it.

Also effective can be faking a suit opposite a pre-empt when you have support to run if they start doubling. Opponents with good methods can nullify the effect of the psyche, but those without good agreements will have a lot more trouble.

In each of these situations, you know a lot about the hand already, and you have a specific objective you wish to accomplish, your pard will usually not go crazy, and you have a fall back if the psyche is revealed. That's what makes a good psyche.

Random openings with no clear objective, no safety net, and no expectation to gain are bad psyches.
The difference between theory and practice is that in theory, there is no difference between theory and practice, but in practice, there is.
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#5 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2008-August-18, 09:02

Didn't somebody write about this in his or her blog? Worth checking.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

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#6 User is offline   Rossoneri 

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Posted 2008-August-19, 01:20

han, on Aug 18 2008, 11:02 PM, said:

Didn't somebody write about this in his or her blog? Worth checking.

Justin's? I don't remember it being in anybody's blog....
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#7 User is offline   matmat 

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Posted 2008-August-19, 01:32

who cares? the real question is what makes a good psycho...
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#8 User is offline   655321 

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Posted 2008-August-19, 01:47

Rossoneri, on Aug 19 2008, 02:20 AM, said:

han, on Aug 18 2008, 11:02 PM, said:

Didn't somebody write about this in his or her blog? Worth checking.

Justin's? I don't remember it being in anybody's blog....

I think this is what han is talking about.
That's impossible. No one can give more than one hundred percent. By definition that is the most anyone can give.
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#9 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2008-August-19, 02:01

655321, on Aug 19 2008, 02:47 AM, said:

Rossoneri, on Aug 19 2008, 02:20 AM, said:

han, on Aug 18 2008, 11:02 PM, said:

Didn't somebody write about this in his or her blog? Worth checking.

Justin's? I don't remember it being in anybody's blog....

I think this is what han is talking about.

Heh, can't believe it's been over 2 years since I wrote that. Anyways, agree with what I wrote then B)
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#10 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2008-August-19, 02:03

SoTired, on Aug 18 2008, 06:15 AM, said:

IMO, an expert psyching against a B/I is unethical.

Really disagree with this. I agree with the sentiment about not psyching against a B/I as an expert but I would never call someone who did that unethical.
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#11 User is offline   jkdood 

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Posted 2008-August-19, 02:18

"Really disagree with this"

strongly agree with J-LoL

I mean, if for example you psyche a cuebid to get a favorable lead, what's in it for the B/I other than a "lesson learned". (Sourgrapes don't count.)
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