W leads the ♣9.
ain't it grand
#1
Posted 2016-May-21, 15:20
W leads the ♣9.
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2016-May-21, 15:25
The club lead could be from anything so I wouldn't put much stock in trying to figure out if LHO has heart length.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#3
Posted 2016-May-21, 15:30
Phil, on 2016-May-21, 15:25, said:
The club lead could be from anything so I wouldn't put much stock in trying to figure out if LHO has heart length.
I mean by the critical moment (K of hearts, A of hearts, low heart, LHO following) I know RHO doesn't have the length. So isn't it between:
a) (hearts 3-3 and spades 3-2) + (hearts 4-2 and spades 3-2 with the T onside) + (some change for spades 4-1 with the stiff T)
b) hearts 3-3
I'm mainly just posting this because I'm afraid I'll get something wrong if I try multiplying the percentages, and to share some boards.
George Carlin
#4
Posted 2016-May-21, 15:37
a) = 68%*(36%+1/2*24%)+1/5*28%*36%=30.6% (=spades 3-2 and hearts 3-3 or half of the 4-2's OR one-fifth of the 4-1's with hearts 3-3)
b) = 36%*96% = 34.6% (hearts 3-3 but spades not 5-0)
there's some rounding going on but it wouldn't change a 4% edge. or did I miss something for a?
(note: these are not the actual final %'s of the grand's chances as there is an approximately 24% chance that LHO had a doubleton heart which both a and b picks up)
This post has been edited by gwnn: 2016-May-21, 15:52
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2016-May-21, 18:24
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#6
Posted 2016-May-21, 18:29
As a simple example, if we compare the probabilities for HHH and HHT of a biased coin, 60% heads, 40% tails, you could either compare just the last coin toss (60-40) or the a priori probabilities of all of it: 0.36*0.6=0.216 vs 0.36*0.4=0.144. In both cases the ratio is the same: 1.5.
It was just a shortcut I used to use known percentages instead of percentages I would have to justify.
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2016-May-21, 18:50
For more exact values (3-3=35.520%, half of 4-2's=24.225%, 3-2=67.8%, 4-1=28.26%) I get:
a=34.30%
b=34.12%
So basically the two are equally good/bad. But I still think I might be missing some case.
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2016-May-22, 00:50
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Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
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#9
Posted 2016-May-22, 01:44
1eyedjack, on 2016-May-22, 00:50, said:
Hmm you mean like for case b, hearts 4-2 along with stiff T of trumps I guess? But we still can't ruff two hearts in dummy. Or erm hearts 4-1 with specifically east having the stiff T so that he can't overruff anything. That is 0.68% if I'm still using these unconditional probabilities but I really think it would be a different result given that I'm giving someone 4-4 in the majors and way too few minors*.
Case a) would suffer a lot from cashing a trump early.
*-ok what the heck let's just do it:
we assume east's hand to have 2 hearts (from 6) and the stiff T of spades (from 5) and know nothing about the rest of his hand (10 random cards out of 15). The probability is:
C(6,2)*C(1,1)*C(15,10)/C(26,13)=45045/10400600=0.43%
Sanity check, what if I am looking at stiff T of spades with the long hearts (I can't pick it up but let's just look at it, in the "naive multiplication" case it would have the same probability)? It should be higher than 0.68% by about the same amount that 0.43% is lower, so about 0.93%?
C(6,4)*C(1,1)*C(15,8)/C(26,13)=96525/10400600=0.93% -- yes, 0.93%!
(of course C(6,4)=C(6,2), but it is easier to write these equations when you know that the second terms in the parantheses add up to 13).
TL; DR: OK so case b has an additional edge of about 0.43% - making it better than a by a whisker instead of worse by half a whisker.
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2016-May-22, 10:35
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#11
Posted 2016-May-22, 10:44
George Carlin