Bidding is 80% of bridge ACBL
#161
Posted 2013-August-22, 20:29
My limited experience says Defense > Declarer play >> Bidding. Best results have always had strong defense and sound but not perfect declarer play.
Consider the long run: we declare 50% of the time and defend 50% of the time. When declaring partner will play 1/2 and we will play 1/2. So 50% of the time we defend and 25% we declare, 25% we are dummy.
Trust demands integrity, balance and collaboration.
District 11
Unit 124
Steve Moese
#162
Posted 2013-August-22, 22:54
Another way of looking at it: a bridge hand has two parts: 50% is bidding, 50% is play or defense. So 50% is bidding, 12.5% is declaring, and 37.5% is defense. Even that isn't an accurate picture, though, because some hands are more difficult to bid than others, and some hands are more difficult to play than others, and some hands are more difficult to defend than others, and there's not necessarily any correlation between difficulty in one area and difficulty in another.
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
#163
Posted 2013-August-22, 23:02
On defence you can pick up an IMP or two by preventing declarer from making overtricks. Similarly you can gain an IMP or two when you as declarer make an overtrick. But you need plenty of boards to eat back the 35 IMPS that you yourself threw away because of a bidding error.
#164
Posted 2013-August-23, 00:43
You can bid zer% games or low % games and win if you can play well and defend well.
See last board of Spingold.
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It just seems if you bid andmake your games and don't go for a number on part scores you will win your fair share.
That means if we need to win the part score battle to win I wont and that is ok.
If I need to fake out your team and steal hands with my bidding to win I wont.
OTOH if that means I need to be aggressive in my bidding and take chances to win..ok but steal from you no.....
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btw it might help to define just what a bidding error is as compared to I just did not know what to bid.....
If you know the correct bid and don't make it that is an error....if you don't know the correct bid for whatever reason I would not call that an error. If I don't know that 1+1=2 that is more much more than a simple error.
If you keep losing 35 imps on simple errors..errors where you know the correct answer, then the problem is more than bidding.
OTOH you may be losing 35 imps for no other reason other than you don't know the correct answer and that is ok.
#165
Posted 2013-August-23, 02:10
32519, on 2013-August-22, 23:02, said:
Short through the corner, as usual... You can also win or lose 10+ imps when you set the contract 1 trick, or if you manage to make an unmakeable contract. And in MP every trick is important.
#166
Posted 2013-August-23, 02:28
#167
Posted 2013-August-23, 05:19
blackshoe, on 2013-August-22, 22:54, said:
Why do people always ignore my finely honed talent in laying down cards as dummy?
I've worked hard to master this element of the game, and I humbly feel that I am the equal of any of the greats...
I've always been upset to see this aspect of bridge given such short shrift.
#168
Posted 2013-August-23, 06:35
blackshoe, on 2013-August-22, 22:54, said:
Did you mean 50:17:33? I cannot imagine defending 3 times as often as I declare. You have to be playing a really cautious system to achieve that. We usually defend about 8-9 of 22 hands in the local club. Earlier it was more but the locals bid more aggressively against us now after being stolen from too often.
#169
Posted 2013-August-23, 06:38
Zelandakh, on 2013-August-23, 06:35, said:
No, I meant what I wrote, but I probably got it wrong. :-)
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
#170
Posted 2013-August-23, 06:51
#171
Posted 2013-August-23, 08:52
Suppose 3NT makes. Kudos for play? Kudos for bidding? Criticism of defense? Criticism of 3♦? If 3NT goes down, is it bad bidding or bad play?
Mike, above, mentions the Spingold. This is from the Spingold, and 3NT was made. Looking at the EW cards, I would not say 3NT is a favorite although, looking at all four hands, it seems to be on ice. The opening lead was a club, Q holding. Bad lead? The spades were played small to the Jack, small back to the 8. Very good, but no doubt made easier by the opening 3♦. Oh, and that's eight tricks after bringing in the spades.
There are of course hands where the contract is hopeless, other hands where you cannot go down (although some still do go down). On many hands, I find it difficult to say whether the result was mostly do to the play or mostly do to the play. Here the play was excellent, but they had to first get to 3NT and, as I say, I am not so sure EW would have chosen that contract if they saw each other's cards.
So is this good result for EW due to bidding or play? I prefer to simply see it as really good bridge.
#172
Posted 2013-August-23, 19:23
For one useful data point, I took a look at the final we just played the other night. All 8 players are competitive in national events and several have represented Australia, so the standard was pretty good. Over 28 boards the score was 61-40, and it turns out it's clear how to attribute all of those IMPs:
Declarer/defence: 57
Bidding judgement: 27
System differences: 16
Psyche: 1
Since defence and declarer play are intricately linked, it's quite hard to separate the two, but that sort of breakdown feels pretty normal. It's also hard to separate swings that should be attributed to a better system than those properly attributed merely to a difference in system (my view is that all 7/16 was due to a misunderstanding and the other 9 to hands that just happened to work better for one pair).
It's worth noting that all the double digit swings came from games that were made at one table and set at the other - mostly due to difficult defensive decisions or defensive errors.
Looking just at the swings doesn't necessarily tell the whole story, but it's an easy first approximation.
#173
Posted 2013-August-23, 19:43
32519, on 2013-August-22, 23:02, said:
On defence you can pick up an IMP or two by preventing declarer from making overtricks. Similarly you can gain an IMP or two when you as declarer make an overtrick. But you need plenty of boards to eat back the 35 IMPS that you yourself threw away because of a bidding error.
I saw a hand that was stone dead due to extreme distribution on good defence- not one opponent found the defence.
Basically it was in 4 spades and the lead was the best club to AK in partner- doubleton clubs in dummy. The killer return was a diamond as partner was void. That would have been a lot of IMP transfer. Amazingly playing with GIBs they found that killer. Some opponents in that tournament played three rounds of clubs. Excellent defence or lucky defence can kill otherwise good contracts.
#174
Posted 2013-August-26, 09:25
#175
Posted 2013-August-26, 16:09
mycroft, on 2013-August-26, 09:25, said:
I don't have the auctions at the other table, but it looks like 13 IMPs were due to the hands being declared from the other side and getting a different lead. Systemic differences appear to play a part in both cases (the big swing came when declarer had to guess which king to finesse for and I had led low in one of those suits. At the other table the other hand had a safe lead and declarer misguessed). Another hand cost 13 IMPs when declared from a different side. Here also the play at trick 1 gave away the contract, but that one was defender error rather than who was declaring.
Different leads from the same side also directly resulted in 13 of the IMPs. Only 1 of those might have been affected by the auction.
So 39 IMPs were decided at trick 1, and 1/3 of those are due to differences in system.
The other play decisions were unaffected by any bidding IMO.
#176
Posted 2013-August-26, 16:28
chasetb, on 2011-July-05, 16:19, said:
Are we referring to Bidding as simply the "system" used or are we referring to judgment?
Btw, the answer to what % of the game is bidding must certainly be relative to what field you are playing in. I suspect that the stronger the field, the more that the bidding % increases (since card play becomes more equalized).
#177
Posted 2013-August-26, 16:33
sathyab, on 2013-August-22, 14:16, said:
Why is that a swing from bidding rather than from the play? It looks like both to me: the bidding meant there was going to be a swing. The play determined which direction it was in. The bidding swung 14 imps. The lead swung 28.
#178
Posted 2013-August-26, 18:54
32519, on 2013-August-23, 02:28, said:
Why were the errors made? Did the player judge that the system bid was inferior to another, or was the system forgotten? If the latter, two system forgets in one match is outrageous. It sounds like you need to dramatically pare down your system.
#179
Posted 2013-August-26, 23:10
Vampyr, on 2013-August-26, 18:54, said:
There was no excuse for either mistake. In fact the first was elementary, something a novice might make. Definately not what an intermediate should do.
#180
Posted 2013-August-27, 08:43
Assuming (I can always hope) that you do not think that I have done anything particularly moronic yet, what now? The five level belongs to the opponents? Does LOTT help? Just how many total trump are there? I post the full hand below, with a bit of a gap, so you can think before seeing it.
The full hand:
Huh! EW have 12 clubs, NS have 9 hearts, doesn't LOTT say that the number of tricks in a club contract plus the number of tricks in a heart contract is supposed to be 12+9=21? We are a little short. In hearts, the defense can be Ace of spades, spade to K, ruff, heart Ace holding hearts to 9 tricks. In spades it may be harder to find, but a diamond lead appears to hold a spade contract to 9 tricks via 2 spades, a heart and a third round diamond ruff (LOTT does assume best defense, right?) . In clubs, take the first 2 diamonds and sit and wait for a heart, holding clubs to 10 tricks.
OK, so this time "Obey the LAW" is the wrong adage, "The 5 level belongs to the opponents" is the right adage. BUT. Passing 5♣ scores a little under 40%, doubling 5♣ scores a little under 50%. I bid 5♥ and scored 93% since the opponents forgot to beat it: Club lead ruffed, heart lead ducked (now I will be down 1 at worst), heart continuation won by E, another club, run diamonds, score it up.
OK, E should beat it. After I ruff the first club, just how was E planning on beating this if I was holding the Ace of spade? So yes, he should place that card in his partner's hand and then the defense is easy. If it should turn out that declarer (that's me) should turn up with the spade Ace then that's just too bad, they were never beating it.
So I should have been down. Yes. But I wasn't. And was 5♥ a bad bid? Wrong on this hand, but at the time I made my decision I was far from convinced that we were beating 5♣.
It seems to me that this is the usual situation. We make close decisions, we are sometimes wrong, we are sometimes lucky. I guess tis hand exhibits my bad bidding since we can beat 5♣ and even bad bidding from the oppoents since they can beat 4♠. And it exhibits bad play, since they can beat 5♥. Otoh, everything seemed reasonable at the time.
Btw, my real objection to LOTT is not that the totals don't always work out right. The problem is that at the time of decision, the trump totals are usually, as here, not known. I knew we had 8 spades and probably not 9, I did not know we had 9 hearts, and I knew EW had "a lot" of clubs but translating "a lot" into 12 was beyond my powers. And then the total trumps were 2 more than the total tricks anyway. What's a guy to do?
May we all get better. I think I still bid 5♥ next time, but perhaps I am nuts. I have been called worse.