Posted 2007-July-18, 09:22
I think I can simplify your simplification:
8 cards: C1, C2, D1, D2, H1, H2, S1, S2.
Opener has C1, you have S1. If you also have C2, then there are 5 cards remaining: D1, D2, H1, H2, and S2. There is a 2/5 chance that opener has the spade. If you also have H1, then there are 5 cards remaining, and there is a 2/5 chance that opener has the spade.
But let's change the rules a bit. Give each person 3 cards, but opener must have at least one club, and cannot have two cards in another suit, because he would have opened the suit.
12 cards: C1-C3, D1-D3, H1-H3, and S1-S3.
You have S1 and S2.
Opener has C1.
Without the two card rule, and allowing you to have a third spade, your partner has a 3/8 chance of having S3.
So let's look at opener's hand a little closer.
The first card is C1.
The second card could be a club, diamond, heart or spade. There is a 1/9 chance that it's a spade.
If the second card is a club (2/9), then there is a 1/8 chance that the third card is a spade (2/72)
If the second card is a diamond (3/9), then the third card cannot be a diamond, so there is a 1/6 chance that the third card is a spade (1/18)
If the second card is a heart, the third card cannot be a heart, so it comes to 1/18.
The total ends up being 4.5/18, or 25%.
What if your third card is a club? Let's compute those odds again.
Well, there is a 1/8 chance that the second card is a spade.
If the second card is a club (1/8), then there is a 1/7 chance the third card is a spade (1/56)
If the second card is a diamond (3/8), then the third card cannot be a diamond, so there is a 1/5 chance that the third card is a spade (3/40)
The same applies for the hearts (3/40).
So it comes out to about 11.5/40, or 29.3% that opener has a spade.
And what if your third card is a diamond (same for a heart)? I'll compute the odds a last time.
Still a 1/8 chance that the second card is a spade.
If the second card is a club (2/8), then there is a 1/7 chance the third card is a spade (2/56).
If the second card is a heart (3/8), then the third card cannot be a heart, so there is a 1/5 chance chance that it is a spade (3/40).
If the second card is a diamond (2/8), then the third card cannot be a diamond, so there is a 1/6 chance that it is a spade (2/48).
Total? 27.7% that opener has a spade.
So what does it come down to? If you have more of an opponent's suit, the opponent is more likely to have more of your suit. And, of course, if an opponent has more of your suit, your partner is odds on to have less. So it's less likely that you have a fit if you have more of your opponent's suit.
Another way to think of it is...when an opponent opens a club, he (99% of the time) has either a long club suit or is balanced. When you have more clubs, it makes it more likely that your opponent is balanced, and he'll have more of your suit on the average when he's balanced than when he has long clubs.