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Do you open with 22 bidding rule?


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I hate seeing these "rules" appear in BBF, and BBO players quoting them as their reasoning for opening or not opening a particular hand. Aspiring players need to learn to hand evaluation and that is not going to happen when they rely on these wretched rules. There will always be marginal hands which you may or may not open depending on any number of factors. I think it is preferable to develop your own hand evaluation skills and then agree with your partner what your minimum openings look like.

 

Opening "rules" should be banned in bbf along with insults, excessive 's and vulgar language.

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Great post JB that brings up so many issues.

 

 

I am one of those that argue hand evaluation is simply a matter of rules. That judgement is simply a matter of rules. Very often unstated rules that players are unable to express or teach in words. A perfect example why teaching is tough.

 

 

But you make the great case that BBO hates rules. I strongly agree with your last 2 sentences.

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I agree with mike777. I think rules are useful to help people develop judgement. If you are used to needing 13 HCP before you can open (or 12 HCP even), and want to develop some better judgement, try agreeing to open all 7 LTC or better hands. After doing this for a while you'll discover that on hands with 7 or better LTC but fewer HCP you often get good results, but on some you get bad results as the 7 LTC is too loose. So then you learn from these results and get judgement. You have to prime the pump of examples (both successful and unsuccessful) before people get judgement of when to stretch to bid with fewer HCP and when to not stretch. HCP, rule of 20 or rule of 22, LTC, ZAR points, K&R evaluation, CCC points, binky points, length adjustments, extra points for shortness, support points, cover cards, law of total tricks, etc. are all just guidelines that help people as starting places.

 

I mean how would you describe the judgement of what looks like a strong 1nt bid? I bet there would be some rules about HCP and/or balanced hand as a starting point.

 

Or to use another example, I have a newish-to-me-partner who is switching to weak nt with me and some of her other partners and likes it. But we were discussing when to look at penalizing the opponents in a part score when partner has opened a weak nt. I've invented a "rule" for that which helps until one develops the judgement to be better than the rule. My rule is X for penalties at the 2 level if your partners minimum HCP + minimum suit length + your HCP + your suit length >= 26 at MP, 28 at IMP. So over a 12-14 nt partner is promising 12 HCP and 2 cards in the suit. When I have 4 cards in the suit I'd want to double for penalties with 8 HCP at MP. With only 3 cards I'd need at least 9, and with 5 I'd be fine with 7 HCP. Is this "rule" better than judgement? NO! Is this "rule" a good starting point while you are developing judgement? Yes.

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I use the rule of 20 and I don't care who knows it. I also devalue unprotected honors, discount for quacks and upgrade for extra aces, all judiciously. Lots of people do the same. Lots of people who don't use that rule or similar also don't know know to count Qx as less than 2 whole points. The one doesn't necessarily have to do with the other.

 

The Ro20 is a useful heuristic. So is "open with 13 HCP" or whatever else you may use. I'd rather see people taught to apply them intelligently than told not to use them at all.

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I agree with mike777. I think rules are useful to help people develop judgement. If you are used to needing 13 HCP before you can open (or 12 HCP even), and want to develop some better judgement, try agreeing to open all 7 LTC or better hands. After doing this for a while you'll discover that on hands with 7 or better LTC but fewer HCP you often get good results, but on some you get bad results as the 7 LTC is too loose. So then you learn from these results and get judgement. You have to prime the pump of examples (both successful and unsuccessful) before people get judgement of when to stretch to bid with fewer HCP and when to not stretch. HCP, rule of 20 or rule of 22, LTC, ZAR points, K&R evaluation, CCC points, binky points, length adjustments, extra points for shortness, support points, cover cards, law of total tricks, etc. are all just guidelines that help people as starting places.

 

I mean how would you describe the judgement of what looks like a strong 1nt bid? I bet there would be some rules about HCP and/or balanced hand as a starting point.

 

 

I think you make a great case for a term that you did not use. TRIAL AND ERROR

But you use excellent examples.

 

 

greenman uses the more complicated phrase "useful heuristic"

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If you use some basic "judgement" adjustments, such as +0.5 per ace, -0.5 per quack without a higher honour, -1 per singleton K, Q o J, -1 per "useless" doubleton honour, -0.5 per "doubtful doubleton honour", practically all of these hands come out with a number which would indicate the action (open/pass) adocated by the majority for a given hand of that value and shape. You can try counting values for shape too, which is fine but only takes you so far and it is probably simpler just to have a given level which is your minium for a particular hand pattern. I do think about adding values for balanced hands but that is a somewhat special case since you are comparing with a certain baseline pattern. Also, some hands in the middle are simply style calls and it matters less whether you choose to open them as whether your partner will expect you to open them.

 

Unfortunately, the bottom line here is that no matter how sophisticated your evaluation algorithm, it is not going to be a substitute for judgement and experience. Perhaps a computer could be programmed with an algorithm that took account of every detail given enough expert input but computer bridge has more pressing issues to deal with for the time being.

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I hate seeing these "rules" appear in BBF, and BBO players quoting them as their reasoning for opening or not opening a particular hand. Aspiring players need to learn to hand evaluation and that is not going to happen when they rely on these wretched rules. There will always be marginal hands which you may or may not open depending on any number of factors. I think it is preferable to develop your own hand evaluation skills and then agree with your partner what your minimum openings look like.

 

Opening "rules" should be banned in bbf along with insults, excessive 's and vulgar language.

I wish I could give rep per sentence instead of only per post.

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Oh dear.

 

I already see too many students who are unwilling to open flat 14 counts "because they dont have a second suit to rebid". Now they have a rule that tells them they are right!

 

Argh.

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