Max Hardy's Two Over One Revised ~ Expanded .... Outdated?
#21
Posted 2010-April-19, 13:21
If anyone has the same sort of outline for a Max Hardy style 2/1, I would be equally grateful, if not I intend to put one together. Eventually. I was planning to be more verbose, for my own benefit more than anything. I find when I write something I retain it much better then if I just read it.
I had suggested a new "Bidding Dictionary" in the general style of Alan Truscott's version, but strictly for 2/1 and "illustrated" with example hands, and a bit more shape-oriented, to a few of the better bridge authors I happen to know. So far, the responses have not been encouraging.
I have all the Lawrence books here too. Thanks for all the suggestions.
Carl
#23
Posted 2010-April-20, 03:19
George Carlin
#24
Posted 2010-April-20, 05:24
The system works fine most of the time and I have used it with some friends as a kind of baseline on which we can all agree. It does have a few holes, and with a regular partner you'd want to develop it a bit further, maybe taking some ideas from the purple book.
It's poorly written. Hardy has an annoying habit of repeating himself, so you'll get an introductory paragraph which explains the system, then a longer paragraph which says exactly the same thing in more words. That's sometimes confusing, because you're expecting to be told something new.
On the other hand, there are loads of examples and exercises which clarify things a great deal.
I'd recommend the book to someone who's not really playing any consistent system already, and wants to be able to say "I play X". If you're already playing another system complete with bells and whistles and want to try 2/1, you might find this book frustrating to read.
#25
Posted 2010-April-20, 09:10
Robert Todd has some notes he put together with his students in Tallahassee in Word. The system has a lot of Hardy's stuff in it and some very nice editing by Robert and others.
The system notes that come with Erik Kokish and Beverly Kraft's Modern American Bidding software are hard to beat (in Word format or possibly RTF). The problem examples in the software are excellent IMO. Constructive bidding only.
Would love to see somebody edit the material on this forum. Agree with others that it contains the best stuff out there in the public domain. Not that I'm qualified to judge. I'm not. But that has never stopped me from giving an opinion.
I'm sure Carl knows how much work Alan Truscott and others put into the Bidding Dictionary. Too bad it was before the web. Maybe it would have survived and evolved. Truscott intended to keep it up-to-date and alludes to having it on "diskette" in the intro. But if that diskette exists, it is probably in an attic somewhere. Amazing how much of that stuff is still current though. And how much is not covered in that book. The historical notes are gems.
Rich Marchione published a 138 page set of notes on Power Precision. Probably not as good as EH's. But it does have sample hands. Actually. I think Sontag participated in that so at the time of publication (1982) it was probably decent.
Would definitely touch base with Dan Neill before investing in producing yet another set of system notes. I would be greatly surprised if you haven't already.
#26
Posted 2010-April-20, 17:32
I want everyone to know my work was on typographic errors and not bridge theory.
I do not have the bridge expertise to put together a 2/1 Bidding Dictionary, but I would offer up my organizational and proofreading skills to anyone who undertakes such a project. The only caveat is that I would insist on a paper version of the product, even if a subset of a web-based database. I love my books.
In the meantime, I have the Lawrence books, the Hardy books, and of course the Bergen books here to re-digest. Lord, we sure don't all seem to agree on a whole lot about 2/1, do we?
Cheers,
Carl
Carl
#27
Posted 2010-April-21, 09:21
but is actually a Lawrence-oriented 2/1 GF system. I wonder if this is worth
investigating in detail. Also, does anyone know when the next BWS is scheduled to be
released?
y66 (Whoever you are) - thanks for the link to the Tallahassee System notes. I had this
a few years ago and was probably not disciplined enough to read it. I had forgotten
about it. It looks worth an ink cartridge so I can take it with me on vacation. I'm not a
laptop reader sort of person.
I've been playing Constructive Raises since I started with 2/1. Today's task is to
discover why
Carl
#28
Posted 2010-May-01, 21:42
Carl, on Apr 17 2010, 07:43 PM, said:
With my own 2/1 system currently pieced together from various books, articles here and there and a few tips from different directions, it's time to sit down and put together a detailed system notebook. I figured I start with this book. I also have the Mike Lawrence "soft rules" workbook, and after a cursory review, I think I might want to stick with the stricter version. But I am open to suggestions and/or persuasion.
Any really good books or other resources out there I am unaware of?
Carl
softcode
The Yellow book is useable, especially if you already know 2/1.
One thing that I like personally, but that never caught on, was Hardy's structure for Major suit raises.
To get the most out of the Yellow Book, you should invest in the Orange book, if still available. I think it is called "2/1 Workbook".
It is a workbook of problems and examples with references back to the Yellow Book text.
It clears up a LOT of ambiguities in the way the Yellow Book is presented.
I also think that the Green and Purple books (21st century) are a BIG improvement over the Yellow book. The Orange book is still valuable though.
As far as Precision goes, it too has undergone quite a bit of change since the early years.
The NT range now is more often 14-16 than 13-15. The 2C opener with only 5 clubs is falling into disfavour. And the 'impossible negatives' I think have been superceded.
A decent treatment that is pretty modern is the Blue Book by Manley and Berkowitz.
An influential book with lots of different Precision ideas, is Rigal's "Precision in the 90's".
#29
Posted 2010-May-02, 02:24
Right now I'd say Rigal is what comes closer to being that.
#30
Posted 2016-June-02, 21:10
eyhung, on 2010-April-19, 12:44, said:
Daniel Neill has a copy of my transcription on his systems page here:
http://www.bridgewithdan.com/systems/SWPow...c_fromEHung.doc
It's been changed to: http://www.bridgewit...c_fromEHung.pdf
#31
Posted 2016-June-03, 06:40
and contains system adjuncts that were way ahead of their time, many of the treatments advanced players use today.
#32
Posted 2016-June-05, 13:23
There are a couple of books by Dr. Neil H. Timm, Ph.D (everywhere I see his name, the doctorate is prominently mentioned ): 2/1 Game Force, A Modern Approach and Precision Simplified For 2/1 Game Force Players
Timm is Professor Emeritus of Statistics from the University of Pittsburgh, and his writing shows his background. That said, he does have some good information in the 2/1 book, at least. I just got the Precision book, haven't read it yet.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#33
Posted 2016-June-05, 18:22
CarlRitner, on 2010-April-21, 09:21, said:
released?
2017. Polling well underway.
Trust demands integrity, balance and collaboration.
District 11
Unit 124
Steve Moese
#34
Posted 2016-June-05, 20:34
#35
Posted 2016-June-06, 03:07
eyhung, on 2010-April-19, 12:44, said:
Daniel Neill has a copy of my transcription on his systems page here:
http://www.bridgewithdan.com/systems/SWPow...c_fromEHung.doc
Link returns 404 not found
Rainer Herrmann
#36
Posted 2016-June-06, 18:36
rhm said:
Link returns 404 not found
Rainer Herrmann
You missed the correction. Several posts up thread.
C3: Copious Canape Club is still my favorite system. (Ultra upgraded, PM for notes)
Santa Fe Precision ♣ published 8/19. TOP3 published 11/20. Magic experiment (Science Modernized) with Lenzo. 2020: Jan Eric Larsson's Cottontail ♣. 2020. BFUN (Bridge For the UNbalanced) 2021: Weiss Simplified ♣ (Canape & Relay). 2022: Canary ♣ Modernized, 2023-4: KOK Canape.
#37
Posted 2016-June-27, 17:31
CarlRitner, on 2010-April-17, 19:25, said:
Hardy's red book was a disaster. The one I am thinking of using is the yellow book. As near as I can tell there's still issues with his competitive bidding, but the fundamental ideas in the front half seem sensible.
I totally disagree. Hardy's red book is perfectly acceptable as a skeleton system. Just add your own favorite conventions. Don't use Hardy for contested auctions. Use Robson/Segal for contested auctions.
#38
Posted 2016-July-01, 20:43
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean