Evaluation of hand play Dummy dummy vs actual tricks taken
#2
Posted 2014-June-23, 12:42
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#3
Posted 2014-June-23, 13:17
100% is ridiculous, unless, like Mr Ace, you peek
#4
Posted 2014-June-23, 14:24
However, my partners never seem to have the same occult abilities, so for them it is about 40%....which means on average, counting my overtricks, we get about 75%.
#5
Posted 2014-June-23, 17:32
I expect that I'll take the about GIB says or more about 75-80% of the time as declarer. I expect as defender I'll take the amount GIB says or more about 60-65% after the opening lead, but maybe as low as 35% if before the opening lead.
#6
Posted 2014-June-24, 01:33
GIB is a model predicting the number of tricks any player will take in f2f bridge. Sometimes GIB will favor the defense, sometimes it will favor declarer. Sometimes it will favor us, sometimes the opponents.
So, if you ask the "average" bridge player this question, on average GIB will be exactly correct. Part of the time you will get more, and an equal part of the time your opponents will get less. Since your opponents belong to the same population, the fraction of boards scoring more than the DD analysis is exactly the same as the fraction scoring less. This transforms your question to: What percentage of the hands does double dummy analysis predict the actual result exactly correct? The fraction of "tricks more or equal to double dummy" (let's call it ME) will then be ME=E+(1-E)/2= 0.5+E/2. (Where E is the fraction of the deals where the f2f result is exactly equal to the double dummy result.)
So, let's look at the fraction E. What would it be? I obviously don't know, but if I look at a typical traveller, I will see that when the board is played 20 times there will be 10 different results. Part of these are due to different contracts, but often there are differences in the number of tricks taken in the same denomination. I would estimate that on about 50% of the boards the actual number of tricks is exactly the same as the number of double dummy tricks, i.e. E=50%. Therefore the answer would be ME = 75%.
Obviously, there is a major flaw in this analysis. You didn't ask the average bridge player this question. You asked the BBO forum population this question. We all know that we are muuuccchhhhhh better bridge players than the rest. We will score more tricks than those other bozo's, so 95% (allowing for partner's stupidities) should be closer to the truth.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#7
Posted 2014-June-24, 01:42
However I do not know what the variance is.
Taking more tricks means you are better than the field and vice versa.
Also the research indicates, that you should take slightly more tricks in notrump partials and 3NT and you tend to take fewer tricks in slam contracts than GIB.
This is all explicable: In low level notrump contracts but including 3NT, the opening lead is often a decisive factor and nobody leads double dummy and in high level contracts, the defense has often far fewer options to go wrong than declarer.
So taking as many tricks as GIB would take does not necessarily mean you are good.
Rainer Herrmann
#8
Posted 2014-June-24, 02:36
It is well known that SD results tend to be biased in the favour of declarer, and that this bias gets weaker as the level of the contracts get up, with slam contracts showing the opposite bias: In a slam contract it is often so that declarer has to decide which finese to take and can get it wrong single dummy, while defenders have little influence on the result other than avoiding giving declarer a free finesse on the opening lead. But lower level contracts, especially when it goes 1NT-pass-pass-pass, are much more difficult to defend than to declare.
#9
Posted 2014-June-24, 02:45
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2014-June-24, 03:17
gwnn, on 2014-June-24, 02:45, said:
I just simulated 100000 bbf threads. It turned out that indeed 58% of the statistics quoted were made up, compared to 41% of bible quotes and 39% of bridge hands. So yes statistics has a pretty bad record.
#12
Posted 2014-June-24, 05:58
whereagles, on 2014-June-24, 05:48, said:
To my knowledge scientific papers rarely deal with Bridge issues. I do not blame them.
The only one I know, which does, draws "scientific" conclusions about hand evaluation, I consider Bridge nonsense.
One old reference I have cited repeatedly is: http://crystalwebsit...my_accurate.htm
However, I would not claim that it is a "scientific paper".
Rainer Herrmann
#13
Posted 2014-June-24, 06:20
#14
Posted 2014-June-24, 07:08
My program calculated the DD-result after each played card. And counted how many tricks/deal where lost.
Beginner usually lose 1 trick/hand to DD. This would mean that if beginner play a deal declarer will usually make 1 trick more than the DD-result because he and both of his opponents will on average lose a trick.
The Beginner defense will usually lose 1 trick to the DD-Result.
Experts lose less than 1trick in 4 hands. Somebody with patience and knowledge in statistics can probably calculate a percentage out of this.
#15
Posted 2014-June-24, 07:23
StevenG, on 2014-June-24, 06:20, said:
Probably difficult to put a single number on this. What the "best line" is depends on how much information is available from the auction, opening lead etc. It is especially hard to establish a "best line" for the defense.
#16
Posted 2014-June-24, 08:59
#17
Posted 2014-June-24, 15:15
Double dummy solver can be found at the bridge captain website.
#18
Posted 2014-June-25, 01:22
inquiry, on 2014-June-24, 15:15, said:
Double dummy solver can be found at the bridge captain website.
Does it show "your play or defense was NOT double dummy" as you claim
or does it show
your result on the deal was not the same as double dummy?
And even if it does what you claim, what would that signify?
There are line of plays, which are simply inferior to the double dummy play and then there are plays, which are superior but which happen not to work on the actual layout.
Rainer Herrmann
#19
Posted 2014-June-25, 09:19
rhm, on 2014-June-25, 01:22, said:
or does it show
your result on the deal was not the same as double dummy?
And even if it does what you claim, what would that signify?
There are line of plays, which are simply inferior to the double dummy play and then there are plays, which are superior but which happen not to work on the actual layout.
Rainer Herrmann
We all know that double dummy calculations will find the winning play on a given hand even if that play is WAY, WAY against the odds of being the "correct" way to play the hand. It is like the par result. If a slam requires four finesses and even suit breaks all around to make, if all that exist, the par result will be the slam that no one would ever be able to bid.
I only posted that the program did it in case anyone was curious as to how well their play match double dummy analysis. I should have added you can use DD-solver to filter your results by partnerships so you are only checking your results with a single partner, a small subset of partners, or all partners.
The results are presented like this....
As you can see, the top 2/3rds is related to the par contract, and gives things like if you miss game, miss slam, miss save, bid par contract, etc. The bottom 1/3 relates to the contracts actually played. So in this table the player involved defense was not double dummy 17.8% of the time (meaning it was double dummy or better about 82% of the time). The opponents double dummy defense was only 75% of the time. These were mostly expert players (JEC matches this past week).
Not sure what you can do with this, but there it is.
#20
Posted 2014-June-25, 12:17
rhm, on 2014-June-25, 01:22, said:
or does it show
your result on the deal was not the same as double dummy?
It's almost certainly the latter. On most hands, there are many different ways to achieve the same result. E.g. if you have Axx opposite KQx, you can take these 3 tricks in any order (assuming you don't need them as transportation to play in other suits at specific times, but even then there's no difference between playing the K and Q). How would you distinguish between "the same as double dummy" and "takes the same number of tricks as double dummy"?
But maybe what you're looking for is "declarer made a play that wasn't part of any double dummy best line, but then a defender misplayed as well so he got the trick back" (or vice versa).