I was kibitzing the following hand on BBO:
T1: ♠4 - 7 - 6 - 8
T2: ♦A - 7 - 5 - 3
T3: ♣5 - 2 - K - 4
T4: ♦J - 4 - ?
So a conversation began about finesse versus drop. And someone made a comment about the inferred spade length affecting the odds so I looked up the odds on Richard Pavlicek's website and posted them assumed 8 and 10 vacant spaces. (Actually if we infer 5-3 spades, that's not quite right, but an aside). One of the kibitzers claimed that Q7 dub was 25% so the finesse was obvious. I said that the assertion was wrong and a bit of an argument broke out, but didn't last.
Anyway, here are some excerpts of the conversation that followed in private...
Kibitzer - "you're missing the Q, 7, 4 and 3 in a suit... if W plays the 7 under the A, then it's only 25% he now holds the queen, regardless of spade length"
Gnome - "suppose west had opened 3♠. you don't think that would change the odds?"
Kibitzer - "of course it does... that would make a first round finesse a possibility... but you still deny looking at the spots played and the spots you're looking at as declarer"
Gnome - "i don't think they are as relevant as you do. if trick 1 went 3 and 4 from both hands you think it'd be different from 3 and 7? from 4 and 7?"
Kibitzer - "if, as the west hand, you played the 3 or 4, then it's a case of deciding from bidding... spots on the dummy were JT98... the 7 by west dictates one of two holdings, unless showing himself a doubleton.... Q7 or stiff 7... there is only a 25% chance that the 7 can be from Q7 doub..."
Gnome - "the 7 can be from Q7 or stiff 7. that's all we know by the point of the decision. you are saying that you think stiff 7 is 3 times more likely than Q7. i simply think that's wrong"
Kibitzer - "it has been proven mathematically, and not by me, I might add, that I'm right... you're more than welcome to test it yourself... have you never heard of the Rule Of Restricted Choice?"
Gnome - "i think you're misapplying it and you are also not accounting for vacant spaces at all"
Kibitzer - "YOU do the math... prove me wrong... I'll tell EVERYONE you're right"
Gnome - "ok. Q7 is a sixth of the 2-2 breaks (40/6 = 6.67%) and stiff 7 is a quarter of the 3-1 breaks onsied (25/4 = 6.25%)"
Kibitzer - "WRONG,... he laid down an honor first"
Gnome - "this is not accounting for spaces"
Kibitzer - "YOU are not account for spaces... there are only 4"
Gnome - "vacant spaces from OTHER suits!"
Kibitzer - "oh Christ almighty... you have 9 cards in a suit... no opp's bidding... figure the odds... HONESTLY"
Gnome - "point number 1, i'm telling you the odds first off NOT accounting for vacant spaces. point number 2, the *entire point of the argument* was that we should adjust our odds based on inferred spade length"
Kibitzer - "look... go to bridgeguys.com, look up the "rule of restricted choice"...
Gnome - "i know very well what restricted choice is. it's an application of bayes rule."
Kibitzer - "I didn't develop it... I'm not anywhere near good enuff to make rules (well.. some I have)"
Gnome - "i am not sure you know how to apply it, but i'm confident i understand it"
Kibitzer - "is your degree in math?"
Gnome - "one of them."
Kibitzer - "to me, spot cards and the card count make it very simple... I'm sorry if I'm FAR too old to remember how to explain it... I quit teaching 25 years ago"
Gnome - "right. but i think you're misapplying it. think of it this way. at the time of the decision, we know west has 7 stiff or Q7 exactly. what are the odds he will play the 7 from either holding? 100%! therefore restricted choice DOES NOT APPLY."
Kibitzer - "ok... I'll try this one more time... you have 4 spots missing in a suit... right?"
Gnome - "yes"
Kibitzer - "Q, 7, 4, 3"
Gnome - "yes" so we know the holdings are (7, Q43) , (74, Q3) , (Q7, 43) , (Q74, 3) at that point
Kibitzer. "agreed. east plays the 3, under the ace, west plays the 7. that leaves 2 spots unaccounted for there's only a 25% chance that west has the Q7 doubleton. if he has Qxx of anysort, the finesse will always fail... brings us back to making the winning play 75% of the time
Gnome - "but we observe the 4 next. And yes if Qxx is offside, then it doesn't matter. If Qx is onside doesn't matter"
Kibitzer - "right... so the winning play is to take the hook"
Gnome - "no!"
Kibitzer - "75% of the time"
Gnome - "winning play is the drop!"
Kibitzer - "NOT when you see the 7 appear"
Gnome - "ok. so let me put it another way. suppose the 3 appeared on the left and the 7 appeared on the right would the odds change?"
Kibitzer - "back to drop. the appearance of the 7 is what changes the odds"
Gnome - "but we haven't changed the relevant holdings!"
Kibitzer - "oh, indeed we have"
Gnome - "he would still play the 3 from Q3 and from 3"
Kibitzer - "yes, but the 3 makes playing for the drop more advantageous than the finesse... you're not understanding what I'm saying about the "spot" cards, even though I know a 7 isn't ... considered a "spot"... if he'd had Q7, he'd have won the trick with the queen against most good players... guaranteed
Kibitzer - "take that hand to your professor... the one who teaches ratios, etc... he doesn't have to be a bridge player to tell you"
Gnome - "why would i go to a professor when i was a professor?"
Kibitzer - "I taught algebra, trig, geometry & calc... I know of what I speak... sorry... don't wanna argue... I'm done with that... just realize, please, given the spots you're looking at, ... when you're playing bridge and have 4 missing, if someone plays the 2nd highest card under your A, then there's only a 25% chance left that they hold the other missing honor, i.e. ... queen... it's not hard to figure unless you just love to argue for arguing's sake"
Gnome - "you assume that people always play their lowest spot. but even despite that! the relevant holdings are a singleton 7 and Q7 doubleton. how can you say that that those holdings are 75% and 25% respectively?
Kibitzer - "ok... please take into consideration, I'm asking once again, that you've made the discovery play of an honor... the person in one particular position plays the 2nd highest spot ... you're missing... there's only a 25% chance they hold, regardless of position, the missing honor. I don't know whether you're aware of this... but if you hold a 7 card fit, the odds are that the suit will break 4-2..."
Kibitzer - "well... I only have a few measly thousand masterpoints... but I've found that the odds I've been taught re: bridge work well... I'll give ...you a game if you'd like, sometime, and we can see "
1♣(16+) - 1♥(8-11 any)
1NT - 2♠(ask)
3♣(max) - 4♦
4♠ - 5♣
5♦ - 5NT
All Pass