Question about percentages
#1
Posted 2019-July-17, 00:48
If I flip a coin once I know the odds of it being heads are 50%
What are the odds if I flip it twice and I win if either flip comes up heads?
So I have two chances of making a grand slam, one if my partner (north) has King of spades, or if he doesn't I also win if East has king of spades.
#2
Posted 2019-July-17, 01:27
NemoJames, on 2019-July-17, 00:48, said:
If I flip a coin once I know the odds of it being heads are 50%
What are the odds if I flip it twice and I win if either flip comes up heads?
So I have two chances of making a grand slam, one if my partner (north) has King of spades, or if he doesn't I also win if East has king of spades.
The mathematics of the coin first: you win if the first coin is heads (probabilty = 0.5) and also in half of the occasion when the first coin is tails (half of 0.5 = 0.25). Adding these together gives 0.75.
The bridge situation is not the same. There are three other hands (partner + two opponents) and you win if the king of spades is in either of two chances. This gives you a two out of three chance = 0.6667.
But this should be wrong too, Why couldn't you find out more about partner's hand from the bidding?
#3
Posted 2019-July-17, 14:26
If it had been in a tournament I would have signed off at 6nt but afterwards I was wondering what the odds were and assuming they were 75% whether it would be worth taking a chance although I doubt if I would ever have the courage .
#4
Posted 2019-July-17, 16:07
#5
Posted 2019-July-18, 12:26
Then it becomes a matter of how much to risk given the stakes.
Two good books on this are 1) By Kelsey Glauert I forget the exact title as I loaned it out, the 2) By Jeff Rubens "Expert Bridge Simplified".
Both available at The Bridge World website.
I would love to see the actual or approximate hand.
#6
Posted 2019-July-18, 14:51
#7
Posted 2019-July-18, 18:58
#8
Posted 2019-July-18, 19:07
dsLawsd, on 2019-July-18, 12:26, said:
Then it becomes a matter of how much to risk given the stakes.
Two good books on this are 1) By Kelsey Glauert I forget the exact title as I loaned it out ...
Bridge Odds for Practical Players, by Hugh Kelsey and Michael Glauert. Definitely worth a read.
If you're getting bogged down in the probabilities presented in the early chapters, you can skip forward to the more practical sections later on.
#9
Posted 2019-July-19, 06:35
#10
Posted 2019-July-20, 01:18
My partner has either king of clubs or of spades. There is a 50% chance of one of those kings being a king of spades.
If it isn't then an impasse has a 50% chance of working. The percentage for those two events must be correct and not dependent on what anyone else holds. Being 50% they are the same as the toss of a coin.
For the sake of argument, if I am certain that 7NT will make if either event is true then what are the percentages if you combine those two events. I had assumed it would be 75% which is what has been suggested.
With that in mind would it be wise to try for 7NT when there is a 75% chance of success. Personally I wouldn't but I have seen other players bid on much lower percentages than that.
#11
Posted 2019-July-20, 02:13
Whether or not you should bid it depends on how likely you think the other tables are to find a slam.
Someone else can check my numbers, but I believe:
- in MPs, you should bid grand as long as you expect half of the field to find at least the small slam
- in IMPs, non-vulnerable, you only need 9.5% of the field to find at least a small slam
- in IMPs, vulnerable, you only need 4.4% of the field to find at least a small slam
#12
Posted 2019-July-20, 05:37
NemoJames, on 2019-July-17, 00:48, said: