glen, on Dec 26 2008, 04:24 PM, said:
<snip out you quoting me>
First, if it was up to me, either/or openings, that are non-forcing and one of the options is 4+ length in the suit bid, would be banned. Thus you would not face case 1. I don't believe cases 2 and 3 should stress a world class partnership out.
Second, at the top levels, strong teams have supporting individuals including non-playing captains, coaches, and advisors, and some of these are assigned the task of reviewing the methods of the opponents and preparing countermeasures. Two of the best pairs in the world for doing this are Eric Kokish/Bev Kraft, and Chip and Jan Martel. If you were to represent your country, I hope you would have the appropriate support for your team, and you would have had the opportunity and time to participate in practice sessions that involved some of these strange methods.
Third, for all openings that involve a suit bid (i.e. not a notrump bid, or a call) in an either/or variation, such as in cases 2 and 3, the base countermeasure is relatively consistent and straight forward (double as value showing, or passable takeout, depending on the situation, mostly natural bidding, see
Countering Vexing Bids). After a little while, you will find that your opponents, while good and experienced, are being placed in uncomfortable spots by their systems, and soon, instead of being stressed when an opponent "opens 1
♠ which shows 0-8 HCP and any possible distribution" you are looking forward to a good result. And then you realize these nasty methods of the opponents do not actually fundamentally change bridge, which is about bidding to your spots, and nailing the opponents if they are in a bad spot. So your partnership is still "trying to win by using our best bidding methods and judgment", except your best bidding methods include countermeasures to the opponents methods, which is nothing new to the demands of top level bridge.
RichMor, on Dec 26 2008, 02:57 PM, said:
This response composed while listening to 'Fundamental' - Bonnie Raitt.
There was a reason why I quoted my musical reference on the morning of the 25th. As to your reference, I vastly prefer the overproduced Don Was Bonnie to the Was Not barebones Bonnie. And this response was composed to the sound of the US scoring their third and fourth goals.
glen,
Roughly in order;
1. Well, we seem to agree about either/or weak openings. Nuff said I guess.
2. 'Fortune favors the prepared mind' or something like that. We hope that all teams have the same resources for preparation; coaches, trainers, computer support, etc. In real life some NBOs have more financial resources to prepare their international teams. Dunno what to suggest about that.
Even when resources are equal between teams, requirements may not be eaual. Imagine the semi-finals of some international team tournament. Each team fields 6 players in fixed partnerships. The pairs of teams 1, 2, and 3 use variations of SAYC, BWS, modern Acol, SEF, etc. The pairs of team 4 each use a different artificial weak-opening system.
Teams 2 and 3 face each other in one semi, 1 and 4 in the other. All pairs have the same resources and same abilities to prepare for their opponents methods.
(Teams 2 and 3 could decide to ignore team 4 methods, hoping not to face team 4. Dunno if a responsible captain would favor that.)
Team 4 doesn't play against itself and need not prepare any defenses to their own methods. Team 4 needs to prepare for the somewhat similar methods of teams 1, 2, and 3. Teams 1, 2, and 3 need to prepare for the methods of each other and for the methods of team 4.
This seems, at least to me, to favor team 4.
3. 'Base countermeasures'. OK, bidding is still about finding our best spot and hindering the opps from finding theirs. Offense versus defense.
With no database of personal experience or match records, I have no idea if I will be 'looking forward to a good result' when the opps open a Suspensor-style 1
♠.
Maybe a sports comparison works. Basketball, professional and international, has a shot clock. The team with the ball must hit the rim within 24 seconds(in the pros) or turn over the ball to the other team.
This was not always so. Long ago a team could get a small lead and then just pass the ball around and dribble it forever. This really happened. Teams with short and quick players with good ball-handling skills were successful.
The shot clock lead to changes in the way basketball is played; changes I would call fundamental. Short - under 6 feet - and quick players are now rare in professional basketball.
Full disclosure:
basketball became more popular after the shot clock was introduced so a fundamental change can be a good thing.
This isn't a slam-dunk agrument, but it's not bad.
4. Bonnie and Donny.
Actually 'Fundamental' is not my favorite recent album. It seems like a case of different for the sake of difference.
I like 'Luck of the Draw' and 'Longing In Their Hearts' much more. Haven't checked all the liner notes so I don't know who produced them.
Back to work.