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In April 2012, in The Spectator, it was reported that Simon Cocheme had done some research of international mixed pairs events in which the male partner sat either North or West, and over a population of some 20K hands, either West or North declared about 55% of the hands, East or South declaring about 45%. Given the population size this is quite a significant discrepancy.

 

It would be interesting to know (obviously for non-mixed pairs events) whether an all male partnership can generally be expected to outbid an all female partnership at the same table (or bid higher than an all female partnership playing the same hand in the same direction at an other table). Or if (regardless of the gender of the opponents) an all male partnership might be expected to overbid more (or underbid less) than an all female partnership with the same cards, on the basis that each testosterone-fuelled male will be trying to wrest the contract from the other and so drive up the auction.

 

Of course, collecting the data for such an exercise would be a nightmare, as we don't have the luxury of knowing the location by gender of players in anything other than a mixed pairs. It might be interesting to have a facility to enter some basic personal stats into the entry docket (maybe, for example, including age bracket as well as gender), armed with which today's computerised scoring systems would be able to churn out all sorts of similar interesting comparisons.

 

If there were fields in your BBO profile for this sort of data we would have a huge population to work with, but of course that would rely on honesty in the profile, and anyway privacy is probably a higher priority.

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Some clubs put the names of the four players on their online hand records so it should be possible to figure it out. Maybe not so interesting for club nights, but as you say, data for tournaments will be trickier.

 

Age and skill level are possible confounders. And system. Here in Yorkshire, all-men pairs are more likely to play strong NT which will probably make the declare less often.

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It crossed my mind that it would be interesting to know if the 55% of the contracts that were played by men had a success rate above or below that of the 45% of the contracts that were played by women. Hogging the bid is the easy part, anyone can do it.

 

Really it is my opinion that we pay far too much attention to demographic statistics. I'm old, white, male but I assume partner judges me by my play. Still, if someone wants to run these stats, I don't mind giving them out. I am also straight,. Born in Minnesota. Norwegian genes. Anything else? Go for it. :)

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It crossed my mind that it would be interesting to know if the 55% of the contracts that were played by men had a success rate above or below that of the 45% of the contracts that were played by women. Hogging the bid is the easy part, anyone can do it.

 

Really it is my opinion that we pay far too much attention to demographic statistics. I'm old, white, male but I assume partner judges me by my play. Still, if someone wants to run these stats, I don't mind giving them out. I am also straight,. Born in Minnesota. Norwegian genes. Anything else? Go for it. :)

 

I checked it:

 

You will win 52 % of all your NT games, and 75 % of your slams. You let about 5 % of all beatable games through and 8 % of all partials. You are married and you like fishing and drinking beer.

 

:lol:

 

Back to the topic: I guess that the handhog factor is bigger then the level of aggresivity. But I do not play mixed, I just hear the stories.

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I think it would also be interesting to know if the same 55-45 split is present in any same-gender pairs, especially where a client-pro arrangement is invovled.

I think it occurs in ours. My partner has a demanding job and some sessions down the club he's absolutely knackered, in which case I know that me playing more contracts will get us a better score, so I do.

 

Also some players who do play with clients have been known to hog contracts there, then carry the behaviour over into other partnerships. I occasionally play with one such, and the headlong rush to get the notrumps in first is fun to watch :)

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Of course, collecting the data for such an exercise would be a nightmare, as we don't have the luxury of knowing the location by gender of players in anything other than a mixed pairs.

 

Even then you wouldn't know what position each player was in, except perhaps in Southern Europe where they tell you who sits in what seat.

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All I know for sure about the subject is that Ken and Roland's posts #3 and #4, in combination, should be nominated for something.

 

The analysis was almost spot on, except that I have switched from beer to wine. Probably the effect of living on the East Coast. Gotta get back home.

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Carl: the thread started out indicating that women seem to get less practice being declarer when playing with men. It didn't broach what happens when they do declare.

 

I believe there are many more factors which screw up the stats. For instance, IMO, the male hand-hog factor is much more prominent than the 55/45 might indicate. The stats are diluted by (again, only in my opinion):

 

--Women get to declare when they preempt more than men do, because their preempts can be trusted and the men feel more confident in extending.

 

--Women open NT, rather than upgrading or getting creative, thus ending as declarer.

 

I have absolutely no emperical evidence to back up those sexist assertions.

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This wasn't a proper trial.

I've done some analysis of club bridge results and North plays much more than 25% of the hands, and way more than 50% of the hands that NS declare. I don't have proof, but here are two hypotheses:

 

- most events now are scored by bridgemates (including all EBL/WBF events). When entering the declarer, some people don't distinguish between N and S, they just press once for 'N' and leave it. This also has a tendency to make East (rather than West) declarer so the EW bias Simon found may be unconnected or perhaps more evidence about real bias).

 

- most events (particularly EBL/WBF) ones are not played as multiples of 4 boards (26- board sessions are common). This makes N and E dealer more often. My stats show, unsurprisingly, that dealer is declarer a disproportionate amount of the time.

 

So overall I don't believe stats saying North declares more mean much; but those saying West does might.

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I have to say that overall I'm not particularly interested in questions about what an 'all male' pair will do or an 'all female' pair. I think relative standard has much more to do with it: in a partnership with one player much stronger than the other, the stronger player will declare much more often and will bid more. This is applies when comparing two pairs.

 

There's certainly some correlation between gender and standard, at least at high level, but I think that's not what is driving such differences.

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I think it would also be interesting to know if the same 55-45 split is present in any same-gender pairs, especially where a client-pro arrangement is invovled.

There are problably many pair, regardless of gender, that have a split much worse than 55-45 but 1eyedjack says that the average bias is 55-45, meaning that for each unbiased pair there would have to be a 60-40 pair. Or some such.

 

Maybe the more routined player tends to sit north because he/she has to operate the bridgemate. More likely, Frances is spot on. Still, the male hand hog effect could be real.

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- most events (particularly EBL/WBF) ones are not played as multiples of 4 boards (26- board sessions are common). This makes N and E dealer more often. My stats show, unsurprisingly, that dealer is declarer a disproportionate amount of the time.

This is a 52/48 bias, so other explanations are necessary for the additional 3 percent.

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  • 3 weeks later...
By the way, I recently did some analysis of the results from an open European teams event scored using bridgemates, and discovered that North was down as declarer on 31% of the boards. That is massively suggestive that people don't distinguish between N and S with the bridgemate but just press the button as few times as possible.
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FWIW I always do that (make N or E declarer, rather than specify the actual declarer). If it is one where we have to put in the lead, I always put 2 for the spot.

 

Why? As you have to press the N/S or E/W button anyway, it takes virtually no extra effort to record the declarer accurately. Similarly with the lead, you have to press two buttons anyway. Some people don't usually remember what the opening lead was, but presumably you do not fall into that category!

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South and West is one extra button. Chalk it up to the ADD internet era lol? I guess I never thought it hurt anything, maybe after this thread I will change my ways. I think mainly I would have to think about who was declarer which would take an extra second or two.

 

Also, I basically never remember the lead if I was dummy, if I was defender or declarer it would take some thought. I do not even remember the last 2 boards I played in a pair game between rounds and I basically never remember hands to discuss them unless someone tells me something about the hand then I can remember it all. I am a little bit of a spaz like that, I'm not sure why but at least it helps me forget bad boards.

 

But yeah, the main thing is I guess I thought it didn't matter

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I always enter it correctly myself, but I will confirm a score with it with declarer and dummy reversed.

 

I've never used scoring machines that take down the lead (but I think it is a good idea), but occasionally had pickup slips or travelers with the lead information.

 

I nearly always write the opening lead in my personal score card. It helps me remember the hand and the lead, and also the mere act of noting it to write it down then helps me to recall the lead during the play of the hand.

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