ultra-light takeout doubles
#1
Posted 2012-October-23, 07:07
#2
Posted 2012-October-23, 07:28
George Carlin
#3
Posted 2012-October-23, 07:57
#4
Posted 2012-October-23, 08:09
mikl_plkcc, on 2012-October-23, 07:07, said:
1. You should pre-alert this agreement.
2. You will find yourself redoubled and in trouble somewhat more often.
3. Sometimes you will gain by getting in the auction earlier, allowing partner to compete.
Probably some other things too, but I'll leave bidding theory to the bidding theorists.
-gwnn
#5
Posted 2012-October-23, 08:12
#6
Posted 2012-October-23, 08:39
mikl_plkcc, on 2012-October-23, 07:07, said:
1. you will likely have (probably already have, based on your post) disclosure issues. Your opps are entitled to know what your partner knows...that you have a distinctly non-standard agreement
2. Your constructive bidding will suffer. This is inevitable, unless you use, say, 1N to show one range of takeout and double the other. Anytime you widen range shown by an initial action, your side's ability to bid accurately is diminished. And if you do opt for using 1N as a takeout double of some kind, you lose the ability to show the strong 1N overcall...this will have a ripple-through effect on your defensive methods
3. Against weak opps, you will probably do very well. Against stronger...I very much doubt it
4. While I think the style likely a loser long-term at all forms of the game, it will certainly mix things up a lot, and increasing variance can result in some big mp scores (as well as some low ones), so it strikes me as very much a mp tactic. In addition, you gain at mps by the fact that the opps will be repeatedly unfamiliar with your approach and won't have time to even discuss how to deal with it. If you like winning boards because of that factor, then go for it. Personally, I find that a negative.
#7
Posted 2012-October-23, 10:41
I explained that if that is their style, then it's not a psychic (which the complainers were complaining about); it's part of their agreements and legal (in our area). *BUT*, there are disclosure issues, and it is likely that at least some of the good results they are getting from this style come from the lack of disclosure. *AND* in the ACBL at least, it is difficult to disclose this properly. But if they do, and if it works even after the disclosure, then go for it.
I agree it probably will work better against weaker players, but I think this style has its theoretical benefits as well - witness the people who are willing to play "no strong bid" at MPs to get more preempts. "Quantity has a quality all its own", after all, and you get a *lot* more takeout doubles that way.
#8
Posted 2012-October-23, 11:06
Also, ultra flat and ultra lite both have problems for partner and his/her ability to compete. In one, the problems are lack of fit issues; in the other (or both), danger of getting whacked. Not sure which is worse for our long-run expectations, so we choose neither.
#9
Posted 2012-October-23, 11:08
- billw55
#10
Posted 2012-October-23, 11:42
#11
Posted 2012-October-23, 12:03
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2012-October-23, 17:32
If I make enough random flat doubles that partner can't figure out how to advance them, all I have done is either get to more bad contracts and/or tell the opponents where the missing HCP are located.
#13
Posted 2012-October-23, 18:52
Using 1NT as a weak takeout wrong-sides a lot of notrump contracts. It's not unusual to end up playing 1NT after a takeout double (even after a light takeout double) and you basically cannot do this (at least not from the right side) after the takeout 1NT. This is in addition to the problems that arise on strong balanced hands (and the strong 1NT is a surprisingly effective preempt at times as well as getting you to your games).
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#14
Posted 2012-October-23, 19:04
Seems in context of this post it is possible to invert the meanings of 1NT and double (full disclosure - not checked all ramifications).
What this brings is an ability to have disciplined weaker takeouts without losing the ability to diagnose strong fits in competition.
Trust demands integrity, balance and collaboration.
District 11
Unit 124
Steve Moese
#15
Posted 2012-October-23, 19:19
-P.J. Painter.
#16
Posted 2012-October-23, 19:28
#17
Posted 2012-October-23, 23:00
I think it is difficult to play this style and also X with a bunch of flat 13 hcp hands. But if your X shows shape accurately to partner, I think you can make it work.
#18
Posted 2012-October-24, 01:47
aguahombre, on 2012-October-23, 17:32, said:
That is quite remarkable. Making (for the sake of the argument) perfect competitive decisions will not result in problems?
This is reminiscent of my early days of bridge when we would make some post-mortems with much wiser club players and they would go
they 'they played 2S='
me 'oh our opps found 3C here, east doubled on the first round'
they 'that is preposterous, I am sure they lose a lot of IMPS with this stupid style'
and if the opps ever got in trouble with their silly doubles, they would say
'aha! I told you!'
So if opps win by making a strange double/enter the auction early and find some contract, it means that their style is silly and my style is good anyway, they won because they are lucky. If I win imps because I passed wisely throughout, it means that my style is good and I won because I am clever.
There is a certain bias that disregards any losses encountered by us passing and our opps making some crazy competitive bidding. I even have it too, no doubt about it and I made good use of this irrational attitude in Iceland (where people cherish the idea of colours being only for children), but I believe it is clearly a wrong attitude to have and it clearly merits more thought whenever they win by bidding/acting more (and I am not saying my flat doubles are automatically right if they happen to win 5 imps on one board or another).
I am jumping to conclusions here but do you realise what you are saying by implying that your style doesn't cause you any bidding problems at all? I bet there would be world champions willing to pay millions for a style like that. Even adjusting for a dosage of hyperbole on your side (yes I make hyperboles too and they are fun), I see the following possibilities why you would say this:
-You are incredibly lucky that you got only 'easy hands' throughout your career.
-You are redefining bidding problems as something like 'bad situations where a stupid call got us' and by definition your calls are not stupid
-You are irrationally biased against active calls you would not make
Yes, my style has big drawbacks and it has lost me many a board. However, it can do other things than just stop partner from advancing them. Partner will have a harder time to advance them sometimes but at other times he will have a much easier time to advance my double than your pass. In particular, whenever partner has a 4- or 5-card major or 5-card minor and he hears my double (and he will hear me double much more often than you) he can be quite happy about this*. I am not promising 4-card support for pd but then again, neither are you! It is much easier to bid a hand with a suit like Axxxx (and a king or so outside) in competition when I doubled to show 11+ with 3+ in unbid majors, (2)3+ in unbid minors (no I do not double on all hands that fulfill these criteria but I am close) than when you passed to show either a hand that is almost a textbook takeout double, or a hand almost a perfect overcall, or a hand that is just quite weak/bad. It will also be much easier for opponents to bid out their partscores when we pass throughout than when I double and my partner bids 2S. But yes, all of these upsides are just a product of a crazy, irrational, idiotic style that can only help opponents, so any wins thanks to it is just a product of my imagination and should definitely be ignored and probably ridiculed.
And what about when I double and they declare? Yes, they will be able to place some cards quite accurately, but at least they do not know that much about my shape. If I make a takeout double with a textbook hand it will be harder to know I have a textbook hand now than if you and I both double and you are defending. Maybe a secondary win but a win nonetheless. BTW this win does not apply for 'ultra light' doubles.
George Carlin
#19
Posted 2012-October-24, 05:59
the chance to bid, but was not able to.
This way you are basically prebalancing, you have the shape, you act.
Going that way you also minimize the issues, that you may miss game / whatever.
Of course you disclose information, if they declarer, but than they may not win the
bidding, or they may play a level higher, which counters the loss of giving away
information ... take your pick.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#20
Posted 2012-October-24, 06:13
P_Marlowe, on 2012-October-24, 05:59, said:
the chance to bid, but was not able to.
This way you are basically prebalancing, you have the shape, you act.
Going that way you also minimize the issues, that you may miss game / whatever.
Of course you disclose information, if they declarer, but than they may not win the
bidding, or they may play a level higher, which counters the loss of giving away
information ... take your pick.
With kind regards
Marlowe
the opps are entitled to disclosure during the auction. It is highly unethical to employ non-standard agreements known only to you and partner during the auction. It is absurd...and wrong..to suggest that they only need to be told if they declare.