655321, on Jan 14 2010, 10:40 PM, said:
kenrexford, on Jan 14 2010, 09:41 PM, said:
I think y'all are looking at this the wrong way, actually.
My concern at IMP's (other than IMP Pairs) is not so much with what my RHO is thinking on this hand. My concerns is with parity and what my known RHO partner at the other table will be thinking.
Don't agree with this at all.
Look, I haven't done the maths, for all I know the best line is to knock out the
♦A. But I do know that you should play the line that gives you the best chance of making 4
♠ now, not the line that would have been best if opponents had defended double dummy.
If we assume that your assessment of how tricky this hand may be for the defense is accurate, you still end up with a completely different principle.
Suppose that the original line would have about a rough 50-50 chance of success. Suppose that the defense error gives you an alternative that has a 60% chance of success, but a third of the failing new lines would have meant that the original line would have worked. Plus, maybe a third of the original line deals would work on either line.
You end up, then, with some smaller percentage of layouts where the new line works but the old line would not, risking a few deals where the old line works but the new line does not.
Your end result is volatility. In the end result, perhaps you win more of the volatiles than the opponents. However, they seem to have made a mistake, suggesting that you are better than them. Don't risk volatility against a weaker team.
If they are in fact really good, better or equal to you, then they could have found this ruse, because you could have found this ruse. So, don't bite.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.