Posted 2004-September-05, 09:10
Ok, thanks for playing.
The votes here are very reasonable. Ruff works as long as EAST didn’t have a singleton diamond ACE and SPADE split 3-2, or four one with singleton spade JACK. Lets assume given the 4♦X that East has more than one diamond. So the odds of this line is the odds of the 3-2 spade split (or 4-1 with singleton jack). The 3-2 split has odds of 67.8%, and rise to 73.5% if you include the chances for the singleton JACK in either hand.
Of course, the world class player (self assessment) but with a gold star took the line of ruffing a diamond in dummy at trick three. The player with “beginner” title (self assessment) did what beginners do, he pulled trumps starting with SPADE-AK, West showed out on second round, so the beginner found the spade hook, and then pulled the last trump.
West, who had CLUB-KING, four hearts, and six diamonds was three suit squeezed when the trump queen was chased, and naturally enough threw off all his diamond guard. South cashed his two diamonds, but as beginners do, he didn’t count to know that his diamond X was good. He then ran the hearts and threw away the club king. Ruff a club, and was surprised when his diamond 7 was good.
Ok, so we know that the world class expert line was 73.5%. How did our beginner do? Cashing the spade AK caters to one distribution -- EAST has Jxxx of trumps. Odds of that are only 11% (don’t count WEST having Jxxx because you can’t pick that up). Even after picking up four spades to the jack, you have to manage the squeeze ending successfully (only one opponent can have club King, only one can stop hearts, and there is a diamond threat but can’t be a both threat due to no entry in the suit, but if one of them have five or more diamonds). So the world class line seems hugely larger in his favor. But then after cashing spade AK, you are not down if spades split 3-2, not yet at least. You can now play Heart to King, diamond ruff, and cash two hearts for a club discard. So how does this affect the odds?
Well if hearts are 4-3 (63.8% if spades are proven to be 3-2) the beginner will be back in the ball game (at least close to the pro’s 73.5%). But even when hearts are 5-2, the beginner is not down, not yet. If the hand with five hearts has the three spades, the third heart will stand up. When hearts are 5-2, and spades are known to be 3-2, the beginner will still make.
So can we compare the lines? The beginner had 11% chance the pro didn’t have (4-1 split onside). If spades are 3-2, the beginner falls back on 4-3 heart split (ok, 89% x 63.8 = 56.8) so the beginner’s odds are up to 67.9%. Not as good as 73.5, but closer. Then you have to add in the odds of making when hearts are 5-2 but the player with five hearts has the third trump. Ok, since at this point, we know that spades are 3-2, if hearts are 5-2, the doubleton spade will be along with the doubleton heart 40% of the time. So what are the odds of a 5-2 heart split? That is 30% of the time, here we go again, 30% time 40% or 12%. Note this 12% does not include the 4-1 spade split, but does exclude the 4-3 heart split… so you multiply by 12% times the 4-1 spade opportunity (so 89% x 12% = 10.7%). So our beginner’s line has creeped up 67.9 + 10.7 = 78.6%.
So in summary, the pro’s line works 73.5% of the time with no chance for recovery.
The beginner’s line picks up the four-one trump split on sides, and when spades are 3-2, he has to rely on 4-3 hearts or 5-2 hearts with the hand with two heart having the two spades. We know (or think we know) why the beginner choose his line, but maybe, just maybe he knew more than we think he did.
And we thought bridge was an easy game.
Ben
--Ben--
West North East South
- - - 1♠
Pass 2♣ Pass 2♦
Pass 2♥ Pass 2NT
Pass 3♠ Pass 4♣!
Pass 4♦ Dbl 4NT
Pass 5♣ Pass 6♠
Pass Pass Pass