LTC v. Bergen (Part 2)

To evaluate the viability of Losing Trick Count and the Bergen method of counting points, I selected hands in which there was at least an eight-card fit and a makeable (according to Deep Finesse) suit contract. I then determined the … Continue reading Continue reading

To evaluate the viability of Losing Trick Count and the Bergen method of counting points, I selected hands in which there was at least an eight-card fit and a makeable (according to Deep Finesse) suit contract. I then determined the optimal bidding level for both North-South and East-West using LTC v. dummy points plus declarer Points. For the latter I used the following scale:

Bergen
PointsOptimal
Level

Less than 20 1
20-22.5 2
23-25.5 3
26-28.5 4
29-32.5 5
33-36.5 6
37+ 7

The table below shows what I found. The Level column shows the level of the most lucrative contract for the team as calculated by Deep Finesse. The numbers in columns two through seven are percentages. The second through fourth columns use Bergen points. The fourth through seventh columns use Losing Trick Count.

———-Bergen—————–Losing Trick Count——-LevelExact1-1.52+Exact1-1.52+

# of Hands
1 25.42 40.50 34.08 45.13 37.27 17.60 2,136
2 26.11 44.63 29.26 44.19 39.07 16.74 2,917
3 30.96 45.74 23.30 42.32 41.50 16.18 2,429
4 33.15 53.86 13.00 39.18 42.03 18.79 2,139
5 49.38 42.22 8.40 35.05 40.83 24.11 1,298
6 47.59 48.64 3.77 29.82 46.08 24.10 664
7 61.07 34.23 4.70 41.61 33.56 24.83 149

1-1.5 means that the specified level by Bergen or TLC was at least one level higher or lower than the best Deep Finesse level but not as much as two levels. 2+ means that the specified level was at least two levels higher or lower than the best Deep Finesse level.

So, the last line of the table (Level 7) indicates that in the 149 hands in which Deep Finesse determined that a grand slam was possible, the Bergen method recommended bidding it 61% of the time, but it was off by one or one and one-half tricks 34% and by two or more tricks almost 5%. LTC was right almost 42%, missed by one 33+% and by two or more 25%. By the way, if the LTC produced a result of more than 13 tricks, I treated that as “Exact.”

In general, Bergen Points appears to be far superior for contracts of level five and above. Maybe this should not be considered surprising for a system that was introduced in a book about bidding slams.

LTC produced more consistent results and had the edge on lower-level hands. In most of those cases Bergen points yielded too high of a bid. Underbidding was rare. Incidentally, the number of hands with low-level contracts is deceptive. In a considerable number of cases the opponents would have dominated the bidding. For example, in many Level 1 boards the opponents would be able to bid game or even slam. Therefore, the fact that Bergen points indicated a higher contract than could possibly be made would be irrelevant. I ran a test on Level 1 hands, however, with those hands excluded, and the results did not change much.

The optimal level calculated by Deep Finesse assumes that both sides play the hand “double dummy.” So, the opening lead is assumed to be the best one possible, and neither the declarer nor the defense make any mistakes. In the real world, of course, people do not play the hands perfectly. Even so, I can think of no better objective way to evaluate the bidding systems.

The other caveat is that some bidding mistakes are much worse than others. A conservative system that recommends bidding at too low of a level will at least produce a positive score. On the other hand, the rewards for accurate bidding at the game level or higher are substantial, especially in total points or IMPs scoring.

In the lecture cited in the first post, Ron Klinger claimed that LTC was “estimated to be at least 80% effective.” The data in this study do not seem to support that claim unless the meaning of the term “effective” is much different from the results of the “Exact” column. It is certainly true that a bid of two spades would be “effective” if nine tricks are available, in the sense that the amount of points won with a two-level bid are the same as with a three-level bid. On the other hand, most bidders would certainly like to know if that ninth trick is likely when the opponents bid three clubs.

I am no expert, but it seems to me that people who depend on LTC — and there are a lot of them — should also consider the adjustments that Bergen recommends, at least on hands with slam potential.

LTC v. Bergen (Part 1)

No issue has received greater scrutiny in bridge theory than the quantification of the trick-taking value of a hand, or, since bridge is a team game, a pair of hands. Since Charles Goren’s books began dominating the bridge world after … Continue reading Continue reading

No issue has received greater scrutiny in bridge theory than the quantification of the trick-taking value of a hand, or, since bridge is a team game, a pair of hands. Since Charles Goren’s books began dominating the bridge world after World War II, the primary method has been to rely on point count, where an ace is worth four points, a king three, a queen two, and a jack one. A hand with twelve or thirteen points was considered good enough to open.

A hand with some long suits and some short suits can usually take more tricks. Originally this was accommodated by adding points for short suits. At some point in the last few decades it was found that it was more accurate to add points for length rather than shortness.

The crucial numbers for evaluating the worth of a pair of hands are these:

  • Game in no-trump: 25.
  • Game in a major suit: 26.
  • Game in a minor suit: 29.
  • Small slam: 32 or 33.
  • Grand slam: 35-37.

Everyone with any experience at all knew that this method had its shortcomings. For example, a queen-jack doubleton was evaluated as three points, but it might not take any tricks at all. Some people systematically adjusted for various things. For example, some subtracted one for no aces or for 4-3-3-3 distribution. Others simply advocated the use of “judgment.”

Ron Klinger and others have championed an entirely different way of determining the trick-taking ability of a pair of hands. This method is called “Losing Trick Count” or LTC for short. If two hands were found to have an eight-card fit, or if one of the hands had a self-sufficient trump suit, LTC claimed that the number of tricks that could be taken by the two hands together could be closely approximated by subtracting the number of “losers” from the magic number of 24.

Counting losers is not difficult: In each hand each suit can have up to the lesser of three and the number of cards in the suit. Aces and kings are never losers (unless the king is a singleton).

  • Three or more pieces: Aces and kings are not losers. Queens are not losers if accompanied by another honor: Qxx is 2.5 losers. Jxx or worse: three losers.
  • Doubletons: AQ is .5 losers.
  • Singleton Ace is no losers; all others are one.
  • Void: no losers.

You can estimate your partner’s LTC based on the bidding.

  • An opening hand generally has no more than seven losers.
  • A level two hand (15-17 points) has around six.
  • A jump-shift hand has about five.
  • A strong two-club opener has four or fewer.
  • A simple raise (6-9) requires nine or so.
  • An invitational hand (10-12) has around eight.

A much more detailed explanation is available here.

Note that LTC is, according to Klinger, only applicable when a fit has been found. He recommends using point count when looking for a no-trump contract. Although some people use LTC in determining the value of a hand for purposes of opening, Klinger himself concentrates on using it for determining the optimal level of bidding.

Marty Bergen, on the other hand, has recommended a large number of adjustments to the point count method. He supplied three different algorithms:

  • “Starting points” are used until a fit is established.
  • “Dummy points” are used when you can support partner’s suit.
  • “Bergen points” (I much prefer the term “Declarer points,” and I think that he should have saved his eponymous term for the sum of the two hands) are used when partner has supported your suit.

Bergen uses the same scale for determining the value of the two hands that Goren recommended. In a no-trump contract, both players are expected to use starting points. In suit contracts in which a fit has been established, the declarer uses declarer points and the dummy uses dummy points.

Bergen has published his adjustments in the book Slam Bidding Made Easier and in a series of columns in The Bridge Bulletin. Calculation of starting points begins with high card points, and then makes the following four adjustments:

  1. Quacks: QJ=the number of queens and jacks (bad); AT=the number of aces and tens (good). Calculate (AT – QJ) / 3 and round down. Add that number to your count. If QJ is three or more greater than AT, you will end up subtracting (adding a negative number).
  2. Quality: Add one for each suit in which you have two of the top three honors or three of the top five.
  3. Long: In each suit add one for each card after the fourth one.
  4. Dubious: Subtract one for each unprotected honor.

The total is your starting points. Dummy points are starting points with three adjustments for shortness:

  1. Doubleton: Add one if you have two or more trump.
  2. Singleton: Add two if you have two or more trump; add another one if you have at least four trump.
  3. Void: Add the lesser of five and the number of trump that you hold.

Declarer points also start with starting points, but the adjustments are different:

  1. Length: Add one for each trump after the fifth one. So, a seven card trump suit is worth five extra points (three in the starting Length adjustment and another two here).
  2. Short: Add one for one or more doubletons, two for each singleton, and four for a void.
  3. Side suit: Add one if your second-longest suit has at least four cards.

Bergen’s method is designed to be used both for the purposes of determining whether to bid and for collectively finding the optimal level. Since the latter objective is, for suit contracts in which a fit was established, exactly the same as the objective of LTC, comparison of the two approaches made for an interesting application of the Hand Analysis project. The results will be in the next post.

Ovidio Capitani

The expert on Pope Benedict IX. Continue reading

On Saturday March 17 I was browsing the Internet looking for information about an obscure character, Pope Benedict X, who was elected pontiff in 1058, ruled the Church for a few months, and then was chased out of town by a competing faction. He is not on the official list of popes. Don’t ask why.

I was surprised to find that an Italian website, treccani.it, had a two-page article about him written by a professor of medieval studies at the University of Bologna, Ovidio Capitani. The article, it turns out, was actually an entry in the Enciclopedia dei Papi, a 2,000-page tome that I had not previously even heard of. In fact, every entry in that book is available at treccani.it. It is a good thing, too; the original three-volume set is out of print and is not even available at Amazon.

I soon located a few additional entries by Professor Capitani (including a long one about my favorite pope, Benedict IX), and over that weekend I struggled through the process of translating them. He employed an obtuse style that is notoriously favored by many academics and politicians in Italy. On the other hand, his conclusions were remarkably even-handed and were thoroughly documented. Many of the citations were from foreign journals that I could not possibly get my hands on, and, even if I did, I would need to get someone to translate them for me.

I was so elated with my discovery that I decided to try and get in touch with the professor by e-mail and let him know about my interest in this subject. I was shocked to discover that he had died at the age of 88 on the precise day that I had come across his work, March 17, 2002.

George Noory often says that he does not believe in coincidences. I wonder what he would say about this.

Courtesy Bids

To respond or not? Continue reading

A “courtesy bid” is one made by responder on what would normally be considered insufficient values. The idea is to provide partner a second chance to describe his/her hand. For example, a 1NT response to a bid of one of a major ordinarily requires six points. Some people regularly make this bid with four or five.

I tried to use my database of hand records to determine how often this turned out to be a good idea, but the sample size was surprisingly small — only about a dozen or so out of thousands of hands. The results were roughly equally split between positive and negative.

When I did this, I did not take into account which seat the opening bidder was sitting in. The importance of the seating was brought home to me last week in a club game. I was sitting to the left of the dealer with this fine holding:
♠K5 98762 J43 ♣1076.

After three passes my partner opened 1♠. This was followed by another three passes. 1♠ made two, but that was not enough for us to avoid a zero. At the other tables the dealer overcalled his five-card diamond suit, which gave the opener a chance to show his 18HCP and fine heart suit. He held:
♠AQ932 AKQ5 72 ♣K2.

3 is easy. 4 is makeable if the opponents fail to take two tricks in each minor in the first four tricks. This is not unlikely if partner is playing the contract.

I left grumbling that we had been fixed. However, some reflection made me change my mind. The dealer probably had no more than eleven points; almost everyone opens with twelve these days. Lefty probably had less than ten; he could not find a third-seat bid. So, partner and I must have at least half the deck. I should have responded 1NT because 1) with half the deck and the majority of trumps, we should be safe at the two level; 2) another strain may be better; 3) partner may be looking at a two- or three-suited rock crusher that he did not want to open 2♣.

Note that this reasoning applies no matter how good a hand that responder has. Even if he/she holds a Yarborough, the pair still has half the high-card points. I plan on never passing in this position again, at least with a partner who knows about this tactic.

I have been unable to find anyone who has addressed this issue in print, but the reasoning seems flawless to me. Needless to say, you might get in trouble if dealer has an unbiddable twelve, or lefty has a decent hand with one spade, but those cases should be relatively rare. People today are dying to bid; it is much more likely that partner is sitting on a treasure trove.

The other side of the coin is that when someone in the fourth seat opens, he should be aware that his partner could be very weak. Opener should never jump to game or splinter. A jump shift is enough to show a very strong hand, and it gives responder a chance to apply the brakes.

Older than …

How did I get so old so fast? Continue reading

The members of the Kansas City branch of the Wavada family have pronounced the name WAY-vuh-duh for as long as anyone can remember. It occurred to me the other day that I must be the oldest of the planet’s seven billion odd residents who pronounces his/her last name this way. This just seems terribly wrong.

My understanding is that the more populous Wichita and Spokane branches pronounce it WAY-vuh-day. If there are any other branches, I do not know about them.

It would make me feel a lot better if someone told me about a geezer somewhere who could wrest this title from me.