nullve, on 2021-May-25, 05:22, said:
As many (e.g. Zelandakh) have pointed out on these forums, the standard LTC is equivalent to counting 3 points for each each
* ace
* king at least doubleton
* queen at least third
and 3, 6 and 9 points for each doubleton, singleton and void, respectively.
Why would any good player use that method as a tie-breaker?
Why would any good player use any single metric to be a determinant of what to do?
I realize that the Bergen’s of the world, writing for the vast majority of players, who are non-expert, like to provide simple (I’d say simplistic) rules. This goes back at least to Goren.
When I discuss bidding with good players, we never, and I mean never, talk in numbers as a representation of our hand. Yes, of course, we will mention how many hcp we hold, but that’s a minor aspect. We discuss shape, but never in terms of ‘I added x points’ for my length or shortness. We discuss degrees of fit, and ways to assess them in the auction. We discuss whether we have ‘soft’ values, or are control rich.
More commonly, we describe how we feel about the hand...that feeling often changing during the auction. We may discuss holding working cards or cards that don’t appear to be working.
In suit bidding, we never say things such as ‘I had 13 points in support of your suit’.
The closest we come to stressing hcp is in quantitative notrump bidding, and even there we look at much more than ‘how many points do I have’
So when I referred to my view that this was not a very good 18 count, one of the many factors I look at is a rough and ready LTC. I also look at spots. AJ987 is much better than AJ543, as a simple example... and look at our spade suit on this hand as one factor I weighed in coming to the view that I didn’t like this 18 count much....in the universe of 5S4H 18 count hands.
To actually explain my thought processes when I look at a hand would usually, especially for hands like this, take a huge amount of space. In real life, much of the process is subconscious, because I’ve played a lot of bridge, read probably as much, and certainly had many discussions with players I consider my peers and, fortunately, a number with players I consider my betters.so it isn’t easy for me to always articulate, completely, why I see a hand a certain way. I do try to set out the main points and did so here in my earlier posts.
On the actual hand, my 2H bid should, I think, be raised to 3H. It’s close, but that spade holding is great, and the heart 10 may well be valuable, as indeed it would often be on this hand, plus I have an Ace on the side.
Not surprisingly, given that both players have close decisions, game is ok but not wonderful
Btw, I definitely did follow simplistic rules when I was a relative beginner...adding points for length or shortness and so on....learning that one needed 26 ‘points’ for a major suit game, 28 for a minor game and so on. So I’m not dumping on those methods, anymore than I’d criticize a child, new to riding a bicycle, for having training wheels....and if all one wants is a social pastime, then why go to all of the work needed to become expert?
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari