good players never downgrade
#22
Posted 2010-January-08, 10:03
Jlall, on Jan 8 2010, 04:07 AM, said:
I'll downgrade to the SAYC or 2/1 typical 15-17, but really don't want to downgrade by 2 pts if playing 14-16.
#23
Posted 2010-January-08, 10:22
Would the vulnerability matter?
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
#24
Posted 2010-January-08, 10:25
fred, on Jan 8 2010, 11:22 AM, said:
Would the vulnerability matter?
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
Yes I would only open vul. But I wouldn't open with 1NT since gib passes with 8..
I think downgrading by 2 points on a balanced hand is pretty ridiculous, not to mention the pleasure of opening in your xxxx isn't so good either! But if someone just wants a story then who am I to question?
#25
Posted 2010-January-08, 10:38
fred, on Jan 8 2010, 11:22 AM, said:
Would the vulnerability matter?
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
I wouldn't
#26
Posted 2010-January-08, 10:40
#27
Posted 2010-January-08, 10:41
bluecalm, on Jan 8 2010, 11:40 AM, said:
It can't?
#28
Posted 2010-January-08, 12:21
#29
Posted 2010-January-08, 12:25
I agree with Justin's downgrade, it has 16.5 Binkie points (deduct one sixth for each jack and one third for each queen, add half for each ace).
I was criticised for responding 1NT to 1S on QJ QJ xxxxxx KQJ, and was surprised to find that was only 8.5 KR points, and only 8 Kleinmann.
#31
Posted 2010-January-08, 13:01
Jlall, on Jan 8 2010, 04:33 AM, said:
Understandable. I noticed that 14-16 is becoming a popular range among experts. Maybe it is because they want more frequency than 15-17 and more opportunities to upgrade and downgrade. feels like a bad 17 to me.
#32
Posted 2010-January-08, 15:07
#33
Posted 2010-January-08, 15:43
6 HCP
-------
Less than 7 tricks: 9.72%
7 tricks: 45.54%
8 tricks: 37.54%
9 or more tricks: 7.20%
7 HCP
-------
Less than 7 tricks: 3.74%
7 tricks: 24.42%
8 tricks: 52.90%
9 or more tricks: 18.94%
8 HCP
-------
Less than 7 tricks: 1.79%
7 tricks: 11.87%
8 tricks: 44.54%
9 or more tricks: 41.80%
So if you show 17-19 and partner has 6 and invites you'll play 2NT, breaking even 45% of the time and losing the other 55%. If partner has 7 he might just bid game sometimes opposite 17-19 but let's say he always invites. Then you still play 2NT and break even on 71.84% and lose on 28.16%. Opposite 8, you'll play 1NT if you show 14-16 and 3NT if you show 17-19, so gain on 41.8% of hands and lose on the other 58.2%.
Even allowing for the usual caveats about declarer's advantage etc, I'd say that the 14-16 valuation looks like a clear winner. Even more so at matchpoints.
#34
Posted 2010-January-08, 15:58
nigel_k, on Jan 8 2010, 04:43 PM, said:
I don't think it's a clear winner at all.
- As you say, the usual caveats about declarer advantage.
- As you admit, not including 5 card majors, and if he has one you have a good fit for it.
- Partner will sometimes not invite with 6 (and this will probably tend to be the 6s that did the worst) and sometimes bid game with 7 (and this will probably tend to be the 7s that did the best).
#35
Posted 2010-January-08, 19:18
nigel_k, on Jan 8 2010, 04:43 PM, said:
As a general rule I don't invite with a balanced 9 opposite 14-16.
#37
Posted 2010-January-08, 21:15
jdonn, on Jan 8 2010, 04:58 PM, said:
Which is why you should super-accept if partner transfers.
#38
Posted 2010-January-09, 07:57
#39
Posted 2010-January-09, 16:56
I gave partner a balanced 9 HCP and us either this hand, a random balanced 16-count or a random balanced 17-count. These were the number of tricks in NT in 500 hands:
Original hand: 4,368
Random 16-count: 4,364
Random 17-count: 4,593
#40
Posted 2010-January-09, 17:09
I would open 1NT if our range is really 14-16. If it means that we open 1NT with quite a few 13-counts and almost no 17-counts, I wouldn't, though.

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