mythdoc, on 2021-March-20, 14:56, said:
No, I made no such specific claim. You interpreted my statement that the differences between the challenges I played on that occasion were obvious as amounting to a claim that I could, and would, do it over and over again like a magic trick.
To be fair, given the way you said 'obvious' and 'clear difference', the most logical interpretation was that you believed you would continue to be able to see such a difference, even if you didn't specifically state it. Though, you actually did, as far as I can tell, when you said:
mythdoc, on 2021-March-19, 10:04, said:
As I have said, you will see the difference most obviously in just declare hands
It's not a magic trick, but if there were *any* discernable difference at all, the above test would prove or disprove it - even if you can't predict every single one, you would be able to perform significantly better than statistics would indicate if random.
If you can, you've convinced me. If you can't, then you can at least conclude that your 'intensified suspicions' that raised 'the strong possibility' based on what you thought were discernable differences were all cognitive errors.
mythdoc, on 2021-March-20, 14:56, said:
So, did you look at the hands I posted above? Could be a coincidence, but 3 out of the 4 IMP hands were game score contracts, whereas 4/4 of the MP hands were part score contracts. One of the trends I said one might see to tell one set from another in one of my earlier posts. Doesn’t prove anything, but certainly doesn’t disprove my hypothesis.
The main reason I stopped playing MP + IMP daylongs a while ago was because the number of flat boards made it futile in aiming for a top score - I found it too frustrating that they were largely dependent on luck vs skill (the complete opposite of your experience). But you're right; a one-off example doesn't prove or disprove anything; a large set does for the reasons mentioned above.