whereagles, on 2014-May-14, 14:44, said:
@mikeh: it's true that double dummy probably introduces a bias. Whether or not this is enough to change sim opening leads rank is another thing. My gut feeling is that in most cases it is not.
By the way, if I recall correctly from Borel/Cheron, the odds for blowing a trick are something like this: (1 suit viewpoint only)
Ace, unsupported lead: ~8%
Ace underlead: ~15%
King underlead: ~30%
Queen underlead: ~20%
Jack underlead: ~5%
I might be a few percents off, but it's more or less this. I can check the exact figures if you want (got the book here somewhere).
What I find interesting is that Bird/Anthias sims actually agree with these figures from before the age of calculators.
I am arguing from a position of ignorance in terms of how B/A and B/C did their analyses, but my take is that their simulations were naïve to the bidding. IOW, whether looking at a single suit or all 52 cards, they simply worked out the risks associated with various leads, given the opening leader's holding.
In real life, of course, we listen to the auction. As Reese wrote, before bidding boxes, there is no such thing as a blind lead, only a deaf leader.
If RHO opened 1
♥, promising 5+, and ended up in 3N, I wouldn't consider leading a heart from, say, Kxx or Kxxx. However, if the opps bid all the other suits and RHO reluctantly stumbled into 3N, I would give serious thought to a heart lead. I am morally certain that double dummy analysis would show that leading a heart in the first example was less effective than on the second.
It may be that on some auctions, a particular lead is incredibly bad, and that the auction would warn any bridge player from making the lead. However, the analysis would include those hands, and those leads that no-one would ever make, in the evaluation of the lead. This would distort the analysis.
Indeed, my thinking is that any analysis of opening leads that ignores the inferences available from the auction has no utility in bridge. It is maybe of considerable use in whist
I don't think it plausible to do any detailed, reliable analysis incorporating bidding. There are just too many systems, too many variants and styles within systems, and too many auctions for that to be possible. Consider a current thread here about advancing a t.o. double of 1
♥ with a 3=3=4=3, and Jxx in hearts. Some happily bid 1N, others say one shouldn't do it without a stopper. How does one simulate leading from AQxxx in hearts? If RHO has a stopper, it is probably a very good lead: if the suit is Jxx xx Kxx around the table and partner has an entry, happy days lie ahead. If the suit is Kxx xx Jxx around the table, leading low blows a trick in the suit and may or may not blow the defence, depending on the rest of the hand. How does one simulate that? Note that making it AQ10xx changes but doesn't simplify the situation.
So to me, these double dummy analyses are maybe of some intellectual interest to those so inclined but they don't help us at the table. In particular, knowing that underleading a Q is on average less expensive than underleading a K is of no value to anyone. What I want to know is whether given all 13 cards I hold, and all of the bidding, and what the bidding means, it is better to underlead a Q in one suit or a K in another. I don't give a damn about how that decision plays out on other hands, with different auctions.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari