Posted 2007-June-15, 21:24
pbleighton, on Jun 15 2007, 07:05 PM, said:
Quote
I think that there is a difference between routinely opening with less than 11 HCP's and routinely opening "this type of hand" with less than 11 HCP.
The difference is whether partner will play you for a minimum of 11 HCP's (and you view your hand as worth that) or whether partner will play you for a lower minimum. When you open this hand (assuming this to be a minimum), you are opening it because you would view the semi-solid suit and good shape as worth 11 HCP in playing strength, requiring no alert, IMO.
I agree. I think that the guideline is unclear, however. There are lots of players who robotically open Rule of 20, and throw some good 6 card suit hands (no 4 card side suit) in for good measure, opening 15-20% of 10 counts. What's the limit? 30%? 35%? Clearly 50% is too much. My comfort level playing light openings would be about 25% wouldn't require a pre-alert, but much more than that would.
As for this hand, it's a great hand, clearly having as much playing strength as the average 11 count.
Peter
It seems to me that a fair estimate of the number of 9-10 counts opened by "nromal" folks would be:
The percentage of times a hand is not 4333, 4432, or 5332,
multiplied by
the percentage of times that you have at least three protected Aces, Kings, and Coupled Queens (coupled with any other honor) to form 9-10 HCP.
Someone should be able to do that math, or a rough estimate of it.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.