SteveMoe, on 2014-November-05, 00:13, said:
The issue I've had with both the LoTT and Lawrence/Wirgren is both are descriptive/correlational, not causal, in how they relate tricks to fit/shape/power.  Steve Bloom did a better job in his 7 part Theory of Total Tricks series March 2013 - 
http://bridgewinners...f-total-tricks/
What I believe Steve was able to do is define tricks in terms of our side's 2 suit fit and the purity of our hands.  This comes closest to cause of any approach I've seen.  Pure hands TT=SF+3 while impure hands TT=SF+2.  Steve concludes "counting short suit losers and using second fit gives a better estimate of total tricks than counting the number of trumps".
 
Thx. I'll have a look at it.
yunling, on 2014-November-05, 01:42, said:
Simulation by Matt Ginsberg(published in Bridge World, Nov 1996)
Length	Samples	Total tricks 
14	46944 	13.85±0.63 
15	47281 	14.86±0.64 
16	120525 	16.10±0.70 
17	102184 	17.02±0.75 
18	69792 	17.99±0.83 
19	37561 	18.78±0.87 
20	15845 	19.50±0.99 
21	5041 	20.11±1.20 
22	1286 	20.69±1.48 
23	237 	21.22±1.83 
24	45 	21.78±2.27
LoTT works fairly well when total trumps is 18 or shorter, but with longer trumps, LoTT overestimates the total tricks and has a high variance. At this level I think SST is more important.
 
I didn't know of this study. Nice stuff there. I did a graph of it and we do get to see the claimed incline. The incline is probably due to increase in the likelihood of HCP wastage (K/Q opposite singleton, or A opposite void). [The graph didn't come out as I wanted (got no excel mad skillz), but it should show the point.]
Trinidad, on 2014-November-05, 02:10, said:
1. it turned out that the LoTT was a much better predictor for the amount of total tricks than the amount of HCPs was to predict the number of tricks for one side. Nevertheless, bridge teachers all over the world are teaching their students the Milton Work count. Why don't they stop teaching them this rubbish?!?
2. if Wirgren and Lawrence had come up with a better alternative for the LoTT
 
1. Well, HCP count works fine until a fit is found. That's why people teach it 

 After fit is found, HCP needs corrections (points for singletons, voids, etc). In fact, it is much like the LOTT + corrections.
2. They did present an alternative: the SST/WP stuff. Just that it's a bit too complicated to use at the table. But yeah, I tend to agree that LOTT + corrections, while not ideal, should be good enough for most practical cases.