nullve, on 2021-May-24, 06:23, said:
I believe this is wrong. First, and most importantly, because it is possible to model exactly when partner would pass 2♥. Secondly, because simulations can be extremely useful even if not entirely realistic. (Think science or engineering.)
They are also a good advertisement for Gazzilli, a convention typically used (as I'm sure you know) in 2/1-like systems where the 1N response to 1M is (at most) SF. So 2/1 players don't necessarily have a nasty problem here.
I guess the reason you don't play Gazzilli is that you play 1M-1N as F1 and (partly therefore) prefer Bart/Lisa.
1. It may be possible for you to model when you’d pass 2H but I assure you that you won’t be able to model when I pass 2H, nor when others pass 2H. Coincidentally I was reading an old BW yesterday, in which the MSC problems included a hand with 2=3=2=6, Jx KJx Jx Axxxxx.
One panelist said he’d consider passing 2H at matchpoints! There were votes for 3S, 3H, 2S, and even 2N.
When a group of experts, all playing the same method (whatever the current Bridge World Standard), can’t agree on the right call with that hand, you have to be pretty arrogant to think that you could model when another player would pass 2H.
Speaking of the BW, I recall that many years ago they ran some hands through the MSC for a second time, separated by years. Some of the panellists were the same, and several of them gave different answers the second time around. Simulate that! Indeed, my reaction to this hand was that this time I’d bid 2H but, if asked again some time from now, I might choose 3H (in my case, 3C if I’m still playing that). How do you model that?
Btw, bridge is not equivalent to science or engineering (one of my degrees is in Applied Science, aka engineering, although it’s from so long ago that we used to use punch cards to program the IBM mainframe then in use, and I don’t think we had much clue about simulations, lol). In science, or engineering, you are going to be simulating a theory on which the researchers agree upon. Here, in bridge, there’s way too much subjectivity for anyone to claim that the constraints they choose are ‘correct’, absent overweening arrogance.
2. As for why I don’t play Gazzilli, it may surprise you to learn that a convention is not necessarily ideal merely because you like it.
Personally, I’m intrigued by the idea of a semi-forcing 1N response, but it would require a fairly significant adjustment to our methods. Gazzilli allows opener to differentiate strength ranges while Bart, when it arises, allows responder to differentiate strength ranges. My partners prefer Bart, hence I play Bart. I generally play whatever partner wants, with a few exceptions such as transfer responses to 1C, which I persuaded my partners to play.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari