Povratnik, on 2018-December-18, 16:09, said:
Huh? I thought I already stated this many times, fairly clearly. This is my claim:trying to drop west's stiff K yields more matchpoints than taking the safety play in the long run, if >= 89% of the relevant field is in 4S.
Or in other words, "IF 89+% of the field is in 4S, you SHOULD play for the drop", but "if <89 % of the field is in 4s, the others being in contracts yielding plus scores < 620, you SHOULD play safe".
Clear enough for you? I really don't get your complaints about my clarity or "may vs.should". Most everyone else on the thread understands what I meant.
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There are certain boards where you may risk the game having only a slight frequency advantage; such line can even bring some +EV. This board is one of them.
I answered to both, without expressing any disagreement. But you somehow misunderstood me and mistakenly said (error No 0) that my final statement wasn't correct. In the next post you've stiffly withdrawn this qualification, but continued to discuss as if I'm somewhere wrong. Not only you didn't say where do you thought I'm wrong, you haven't even pointed in the direction of my apparent wrongness. You're explaining general things - probabilities, mathematical expectation, mechanism of pair tournaments... I never asked, but I am asking you now - what made you to assume that I didn't know all that stuff you're writing about?
You basically claimed it's always right to take the safety play to make game if available on any board. A blanket statement, not restricting yourself to this particular board where the edges are small and thus a small number of outlier contracts should favor the safety play. That the field always has enough outlier contracts that the safety play is always right. You said if that if you score 620 when 650 and -100 are also possible that you will always score well above 50%. These just aren't true statements. Some fields are more homogeneous than others, and some boards are flatter than others. One has to be able to estimate how flat a board will be based on the board itself and knowledge of the field, to guess how many will be in the same contract. The more people are in the same contract, the more that favors eschewing safety plays even for very small edges. And if the edge is larger for the overtrick, then one needs less flatness to justify not playing safe. My general claim is don't play safe at matchpoints when in normal contracts. Only when edges are very small as here should one even consider playing safe, if you feel there are enough outlier contracts (> 11% on this board). Your initial posts read to most as "always play safe, making game always > 50%" which is just not true in my experience. This board is close because the edge is small, it's not clear if 90+% are going to be in game or only say 85%.
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I don't get this argument at all. If a ton of people miss game, overtricks don't matter at all. You get a fantastic score for bidding and making game, and it's right to play safe. But if a ton of people are in the exact same game contract, the overtrick matters A LOT. If everyone is dropping the stiff K offside, you get a near bottom if you don't. The more people that are in the same contract, the more MP are swung by getting the overtrick or not. If people are in different contracts then the overtrick swing doesn't matter, the making vs. going down does.
You are just wrong here.
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There would be a point advantage if the scoring were total points or IMPs, because you only lose 50 pts/1 IMP when wrong but gain 600+/13+ when right. But at MP it's simply moving tie to loss either way, there's no "point advantage".
Your point advantage comes into play *when there are outlier contracts*. This is because now when you win, you swing a half matchpoint point against the overtrick players AND a matchpoint against outlier contracts, while the overtrick players don't gain anything extra against the outlier contracts when the overtrick was available. So thus the more outliers, the more that favors the safety play, and vice versa. *PROPORTION OF FIELD IN SAME CONTRACT IS WHAT MATTERS*. Proportion, not raw number.
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My statement is that going for overtrick is right if >89% of the field is in game, absolute size of the field, whether 3 tables, 30, tables, 300 is basically irrelevant. Smaller field favors going safe because single outliers equate to a bigger chunk of the field; if one table in 8 is weird you want to play safe; if it's only one table in 13 then you don't.
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So what? So your strategy should change depending on your estimate of what percent of the field is in what contract.The correct answer is not to "always play safe" as your initial post appears to suggest.It is not to "never play safe" either.One has to estimate how much of the field is in the same contract, and compare the edge of the safety play vs. the overtrick play, and make your choice based on all the numbers.
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My method was fine. If the pair drops out of the same contract (favoring drop), it was assumed to drop into the relevant safety play group (I specifically excluded +800 group, out of reach). And I calculated the breakeven percentage. I just was sloppy with the algebra earlier and came up with a number smaller than reality the first time.
Typical MP pairs problem.
You,West, declare 3N.
North leads ♠T and South follows with ♠6.
Plan the play