ODR origins
#1
Posted 2011-June-02, 14:27
#2
Posted 2011-June-02, 14:30
#4
Posted 2011-June-02, 14:41
I was vaguely aware of the phrase some time before that, but possibly only because I played at the same club as Segal and Robson.
#5
Posted 2011-June-02, 14:44
Fluffy, on 2011-June-02, 14:33, said:
No one has ever compared how good the offensive value of their hand is compared to the defensive value in a spanish speaking country? Am I wrong that ODR is not a formalized concept, that is simply all that it means? In that case, I cannot believe that you thought that it was "invented" by fought the law, maybe they formalized it in some way that I am unaware of, otherwise...lol.
#6
Posted 2011-June-02, 14:59
JLOGIC, on 2011-June-02, 14:44, said:
perhaps not with that exact terminology, but edgar kaplan in the early 60s taught about the difference between quick tricks and defensive tricks, and even offered translation ruloes.
the more distributional the hand, the more offensive it is
plus all the discussion about neutral hands for offense/defense
if memory does not fail me some books by ron klinger discuss this issue too.
#7
Posted 2011-June-03, 00:54
babalu1997, on 2011-June-02, 14:59, said:
That is not quite what Robson and Segal talked about when they introduced ODR. Aces are "ODR-neutral" for them, and as for Kings, Queens, and Jacks, it depends whether they are in "our" suits or "their" suits.
Read up on it in their book, available from http://bridge.mgoetz...t/bbf.html#comp .
-- Bertrand Russell
#8
Posted 2011-June-03, 09:04
mgoetze, on 2011-June-03, 00:54, said:
Read up on it in their book, available from http://bridge.mgoetz...t/bbf.html#comp .
Thanks, I do have that book. For Kaplan queens and jacks in the opps bid suit are assigned increased defense values dpending on their poaition.
But many authors before Robson and segal, have the tackled the topic of shifting hand valuation, with different terminology, you can even get references to it from Mollo's Declarer Play Technique. And, of course, from Lawrence's Complete book of hand valuation.
#9
Posted 2011-June-03, 12:28
You can't use O/D in the same way. Oh well if the scale is exp(#tricks) rather than #tricks then I am cool with ratios but that probably isn't the idea.
#10
Posted 2011-June-03, 12:40
George Carlin
#11
Posted 2011-June-03, 13:33
-P.J. Painter.
#12
Posted 2011-June-04, 05:23
O-D = 5 --> you're ok for a 2-level preempt at R/R or G/G (4 for G/R, 6 for R/G)
O-D = 6 --> you're ok for a 3-level preempt at ...
etc...
#13
Posted 2011-June-04, 08:23
In reference to Ken's post, OCD predates bidding, but bidding added the necessary structure.
#14
Posted 2011-June-09, 05:17
I think it is pretty irrelevant whether you count tricks, ratio features, or even use 2 different evaluation methods for offense against defence - what matters is that the evaluation provides a good basis for decision-making for both members of the partnership.