Runout Methods Ideology/Systems Appreciated
#21
Posted 2014-March-11, 18:21
I would say it's as forcing as any other forcing call - "partner, you'd better be right." Or at least as forcing as any other "pure takeout" double (or "double shows suit X" as the case may be).
[Edit: the previous discussion was here]
#22
Posted 2014-March-12, 08:22
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-11, 13:48, said:
But if, whenever the opps ask this question, your partner knows that you are going to pass (to take the extreme case) how can it be ethical for partner to respond that the bid is 100% forcing knowing that you are about to pass?
#23
Posted 2014-March-12, 08:42
While it worked, I don't feel so good about explaining a bid as "forcing" when in fact I intend to pass it. The alternative (to give partner the UI that this time I won't treat it as forcing) is, of course, much worse.
Sometimes forcing really means forcing - you would never pass Stayman or transfer by an unpassed hand, or a 2♣ opening. But sometimes a "forcing" bid is made by a hand that is sufficiently limited that partner is able to see that game is unlikely. You can occasionally pass a reverse bid or a forcing 1NT response. Maybe even Stayman by a passed hand if you play weak NT.
Ideally opps should be told whether a call is really forcing or just "in principle" forcing.
#24
Posted 2014-March-12, 08:51
broze, on 2014-March-12, 08:22, said:
You are required to disclose your partnership agreements. If the agreement is that the redouble is 100% forcing, then that is what you have to disclose.
You are also entitled to take whatever inferences that you choose to take from your opponents' actions. You do so at your own risk.
I suppose that if the partnership has a history of passing the redouble, that should be disclosed. I don't know if the added information that the times when the redouble was passed was when fourth hand asked about the redouble is something that has to be disclosed.
#25
Posted 2014-March-12, 08:53
broze, on 2014-March-12, 08:22, said:
He doesn't know I'm going to pass, and it's me that makes the explanation of his pass.
#26
Posted 2014-March-12, 08:57
My suspicion is that most, and maybe all, of those who advance that argument haven't played much 'pass forces a redouble' and have simply reasoned that it is flawed.
I have played pass forces a redouble for many years, at competition ranging from club games to world championships, and in the hundreds of occasions on which this has arisen, not once...not once....have we had a bad result.
There was one hand in a BB round robin against an eastern European team when I passed and sat for the redouble with an 8 count, opposite a 10-12, and they could have beaten us 2 tricks...however, we made an overtrick. Now, one can't and shouldn't count on misdefence as a justification for the method, and one hand hardly proves anything.
However, my experience at the table is that the pass forcing the redouble creates enormous pressure on the opps.
Indeed, my view is that those who criticize the method are guilty of something that I sometimes do: they are assuming that the opps are infallible: that the opps will always do the right thing.
At imps, there is a world of difference between defending 1N x, expecting to beat it one trick, and defending 1N xx expecting to beat it one trick. Nobody is that good that they can be confident of a 1 trick set.
Look at it another way: if we are passing so as to play in 1N doubled, we are doing so because we hope to get out -1 OR because we hope/expect to make it. LHO, in 4th chair doesn't know which, assuming beads of sweat haven't broken out on our forehead. He is going to be under intense pressure. Indeed, Philking implicitly recognizes this when he says that 4th chair can run after we sit for the redouble.....yes, once in a while he'll have enough that he won't, but that is such a parlay....we have some values, otherwise we'd run, rho has most of the missing values....the more he has, the less LHO has and the more he will run. Indeed, my experience is that LHO almost always runs exactly when RHO has the huge hand.
In the meantime, it is obvious that having the forcing pass available adds to the ability to run accurately when one decides to run. This edge more than offsets any real world problem arising from being unable to play 1N x'd. Let me repeat: in literally hundreds of actual play, some at very high levels of competition, I have never played 1N xx down 1. There have been 2 times when I should have been down 2 (the BB and once in a round-robin at the Canadian team trials) but in both cases we made.
On balance then, in real life, pass forcing a redouble works very well indeed.
One side note for the posters who play an immediate strength redouble, and went down: don't redouble with strong shapely hands.....bid 2N as an unbalanced force.
#27
Posted 2014-March-12, 09:34
For all the "I haven't had a bad result playing 1NTxx", I'll tell you I've had exactly one bad result playing 1NTx (and the one bad result playing 1NTxx I posted above). And I'm sure I get to play 1NTx significantly more often than you feel comfortable playing 1NTxx. Sure, at IMPs, there's less pressure on 1NTx than 1NTxx, but at MPs, there's probably *more* - -180 is a *really bad* score, as is +100; +200 not so much, and -560 is worth what, a board a year? over -180 if you play every day.
So while you do get more lovely options to find a safe place to land, and while very few pairs actually *can* use the second round you frequently provide (with the pass and with at least some of the bids) - more can use the extra cuebid you give, of course - those that can, do. And when I redouble, opener knows when they run that I don't have a garbage hand looking to get out for the lowest minus we can.
A good runout system, understood and played well, will lead to "almost zero" bad scores playing after the double. I also want to look at getting some good scores when we *don't* play the hand.
Re: 4th hand running: I will note that when we were able to take 10 of the last 6 tricks (and it wasn't a shapely hand, I had a balanced 13), 4th hand had a quiet 2. It was vul at IMPs. They're good players, I'd say in the top 2 or 3 pairs in Calgary; they just trust their partner's doubles by agreement. I grant it was a small club night, so the downsides of going -7 or -1160 were minimal at best; but still.
#28
Posted 2014-March-12, 09:43
ArtK78, on 2014-March-12, 08:51, said:
This is the question really. Perhaps the issue has not arisen enough times for Cyber to make it a practically useful question but I don't know the answer. For example, if you had an agreement to vary your methods depending on the board number would that be illegal? If not you would surely have to disclose it. What about an agreement depending on what colour shirt LHO was wearing - illegal? If so it seems that if you have an agreement or a CPU that when RHO asks a question like this you will pass the double, then that is either illegal or it should be disclosed.
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-12, 08:53, said:
My point is that if you do it every time then he does know. Admittedly this is a theoretical question - I am not suggesting that you are unethical.
Sorry for derail.
#29
Posted 2014-March-12, 10:07
#30
Posted 2014-March-14, 16:54
whereagles, on 2014-March-09, 04:12, said:
I normally play a method which copes well with the 4333 hands. It's also quite easy to remember.
Pass = to play in 1NT
2♣ = to play in 2♣
2♦ = to play in 2♦
2♥ = to play in 2♥
2♠ = to play in 2♠
Rbl = strong hand, to play in 1NTxx or suggesting doubling the opponents if they escape. [Alternatively, if you prefer to play in a suit contract when Responder holds 2 4-card suits, you can choose to give up showings the strong hands and play redouble as SOS.]
#31
Posted 2014-March-14, 20:03
mikeh, on 2014-March-12, 08:57, said:
My suspicion is that most, and maybe all, of those who advance that argument haven't played much 'pass forces a redouble' and have simply reasoned that it is flawed.
I guess I am one of those people, and while I have usually found the chance to play in 1NTx valuable, I cannot say that I have never had a bad result!
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Fourth hand will have another go (which you refer to later in your post), whereas with a redouble for blood this is his last chance to decide. Although I can see that the latter may lose based on frequency. And I guess that the forced redouble puts pressure on the doubler too, which is something I had never thought about.
Quote
At imps, there is a world of difference between defending 1N x, expecting to beat it one trick, and defending 1N xx expecting to beat it one trick. Nobody is that good that they can be confident of a 1 trick set.
Isn't this the same whether you made a penalty redouble or sat for a forced redouble?
Quote
I will definitely try it and see how it goes.
broze, on 2014-March-12, 09:43, said:
I have to admit that I think it is borderline at best.
#32
Posted 2014-March-14, 22:40
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-12, 10:07, said:
When an opponent asks whether your partner's pass is 100% forcing, what he really wants to know is whether there is any chance you might pass it. There is, and you need to disclose that fact and the circumstances under which you would pass.
#33
Posted 2014-March-15, 05:08
Vampyr, on 2014-March-14, 22:40, said:
There is no chance of me passing it unless RHO gives me so much AI that he wants me to bid that I can't ignore it.
#34
Posted 2014-March-15, 06:44
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-15, 05:08, said:
Right. So you must disclose this.
#36
Posted 2014-March-15, 08:56
ArtK78, on 2014-March-15, 08:13, said:
That is not the point. The point is that there is a difference between the "agreement" and what Cyberyeti actually does.
A lot of people make the mistake of thinking that if they do something, say pass here, that partner does not cater for I any way, they do not need to disclose it. This is not true; the opponents are entitled to information from partnership experience as well as agreements. If a bid is forcing in theory, but you sometimes pass it according to certain criteria (not including psyching or otherwise not having your bid in the first place), you must disclose the possibility and the criteria.
Perhaps this will be clearer if I supply an example: suppose you have made an agreement with your partner but you never follow it. Which do you disclose, the agreement or actual practice? Both? What if both you and your partner usually ignore the agreement? What if you ignore it sometimes?
An "agreement" means nothing if it is not followed.
#37
Posted 2014-March-15, 09:21
Vampyr, on 2014-March-15, 08:56, said:
A lot of people make the mistake of thinking that if they do something, say pass here, that partner does not cater for I any way, they do not need to disclose it. This is not true; the opponents are entitled to information from partnership experience as well as agreements. If a bid is forcing in theory, but you sometimes pass it according to certain criteria (not including psyching or otherwise not having your bid in the first place), you must disclose the possibility and the criteria.
Perhaps this will be clearer if I supply an example: suppose you have made an agreement with your partner but you never follow it. Which do you disclose, the agreement or actual practice? Both? What if both you and your partner usually ignore the agreement? What if you ignore it sometimes?
An "agreement" means nothing if it is not followed.
There's a big difference between an agreement that is regularly breached and one that is breached <1% of the time. In the UK you don't normally disclose psychic bidding habits unless they're in a place that they're very regular weak 2-P-strong bid for example for some partnerships, I see this more akin to that situation, and the breaching isn't regular enough to need to disclose.
#38
Posted 2014-March-15, 10:04
#39
Posted 2014-March-15, 10:38
steve2005, on 2014-March-15, 10:04, said:
This is what normally happens when you psyche in my part of the world, whatever ethical atrocity the opps commit, you will get ruled against if you've psyched.
#40
Posted 2014-March-15, 10:51
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-15, 10:38, said:
Yes, this is true. We had a shocking one a few years ago which I will post in a new thread. Anyway how many times have the opponents asked whether pass was 100% forcing? I think that your <1% is a huge underestimate! and you should disclose.
What would you say, by the way, if you told the opponents that the bid was forcing, and they asked, "do you ever pass it?" and then asked, "when?"