awm Posted March 26, 2010 Report Share Posted March 26, 2010 Well we do count 2 QP for singleton kings. But anyway: 4♥ = 1 or 3 top spades, 0 or 2 top hearts---- 4♠ relay4N = 0 or 2 top diamonds---- 5♣ relay5♥ = 1 top club, spades headed by the king (stopping to show king, run on to show A/Q)---- 5♠ relay5N = no spade jack....... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akhare Posted March 26, 2010 Report Share Posted March 26, 2010 Say I've shown 6 QPs and 5-4-3-1 shape at the bid of 3S. Assuming 4C is dcb relay, how would the bidding continue for Kxxxx xxxx KQx K assuming the singleton K is counted as 1 QP Here's the same hand based on another DCB scheme called "Go Fish" starting with 4♣ = ask for queens: ...4♦: 1 Q........4♥ ask for kings...5♥ -- No K♥, perforce only K♠ or 3 Ks, including the other two Here's an unedited post by John Sheehan (of Prism Signals fame) about his GOFISH alterative to DCB when using RPs (aka AKQ points). Hi all, Dlr: WVul: EWAuction: Moscito Variation West EastA863 K5A652 K8Q A4KQJ5 A876432 1C 2D2H 2S2N 3C3D 3H 2=2=2=7.3S (1) 4S 10 relay points.4N (2) 5S (No queens / all 4)5N (3) 6C Same rank.7C (1) 'Number of Relay points?' (A=3 K=2 Q=1)(2) 'Do you have any queens?'(3) 'Tell me about your two kings.' Note: The first step after the relay points responseasks,'Do you have any queens?' In response to the queen ask:Step 1 = 1 Q.Step 2 = 2 Q's.Step 3 = 3 Q's.Step 4 = 0 Q's. Go Fish! (or 4 Q's) If The number of relay points is known; and,The number of queens is known; then,The exact number of aces and kings is known. Note: 'Tell me about your kings.' The first step after the number of queens responseasks about location of kings. (If you are more interested in queensthan kings, skip to the second step toask about the location of queens.) In response to, 'Tell me about your kings.' To show one or three kings, stop at the bid thatcorresponds in the scanning orderto the one suit with (or without) the king. If two kings are held; thenStep 1 = 2 K's of the same RankStep 2 = 2 K's of the same ColorStep 3 = 2 K's of the same Shape (C/H D/S) Dlr: WVul: EWAuction: Moscito Variation West EastA7 KQ85AQ3 K852AQJ874 K6J4 A96 1C 2D2H 2S2N 3C3D 3H 4=4=3=23S(1) 4S 10 relay points.4N(2) 5C 1 Queen.5D(3) 5N No club king.6C(4) 6D Spade queen.7N (1) 'Number of Relay points?' (A=3 K=2 Q=1)(2) 'Do you have any queens?'(3) 'Tell me about your kings.'(4) 'What about that queen?' Is Go Fish! for relay points a practical approach to solving the problemof discoverying and pinpointing honors in slam auctions? Johnny Sheehanwww.prismsignals.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
straube Posted March 26, 2010 Report Share Posted March 26, 2010 Adam, am I right here? It seems like your structure gives a poor picture of responder's hand early on and then a very good picture at a higher level...especially when the nature of the first single honor is shown. So the relayer has to be willing to play a high level (like 5S or 5N) before contemplating an ask. The vanilla structure that Atul and I have been using lets us abort early but often with an incomplete picture of partner's hand. Would your structure work for us if we counted the singleton king as 1? (thinking it would). I assume you count a singleton queen as 1 and that you try to show whether you have it or not. Perhaps we could count it as 0 but show whether we have it or not (like a bonus). Or maybe that would throw confusion into things. Anyway, I think I like your structure. I'm not quite getting the GoFish structure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted March 26, 2010 Report Share Posted March 26, 2010 The thing is that many inferences are available from opener's honor holdings. Usually if opener can't tell what's going on fairly early, it actually doesn't matter because too many honors are missing for slam to be practical. It's actually not unusual once QP are shown for opener to figure that there are only a small number of possible honor patterns, and to be able to sort them out fairly early. Another observation is that we do play RKC asks as well. The hand types where opener is often unable to tell early in the sequence what's happening often correspond well to the RKC ask hands. I don't really know how to explain this further except to recommend trying it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
straube Posted March 27, 2010 Report Share Posted March 27, 2010 Atul and I tried (your) Adam's structure last night and it worked really well. Thanks a lot. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shevek Posted March 30, 2010 Report Share Posted March 30, 2010 Even though I have never tried it, I would expect AKQ321 is much harder to read. I mean that with AK21 you often can divine the exact location of honour cards or for example that they must be 2 aces (you hold 3 kings).It is obviously harder to determine teller's honour combination from just the response (showing some given number of relay points) because, unless that number is very small, there are many more permutations that are possible than for a comparable number of AK21 controls. But there are ways to reduce that number of permutations significantly: a cheap way of doing so is to have teller show his (non-singleton) king parity* before entering into DCB. One could do as the Swedes did (still do?): stop with even and zoom with odd. Better, however, is to stop with even when holding 2, 3, 6, 9, 12 or 15 RP and stop with odd with other holdings. This is easy to remember (stop with even when 2 or a multiple of 3) and much closer to the actual frequency. (Of course, the parity answer should also depend on how many RP asker has but I don't now of a system that can show that.) I've done a lot of testing that shows that this method is better than not asking for king parity or asking for ace (or queen) parity; it's still not clear to me whether this is the best method of honour-showing/DCB. (Matt Ginsberg tells me it is clearly not for a computer program but we're interested in what humans can remember at the table.) David *This assumes that you wisely count a kingleton as 1RP not 2; again, extensive testing shows this to be much better.Well done in ITS. Have you inflicted stuff like this on Justin? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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