Stephen Tu, on 2016-July-16, 09:57, said:
RC is calculating the frequencies *after the first finesse has lost*, and *after you have led the second card and 2nd hand has followed low*, and you are at the decision point of whether to try to drop the remaining honor, or finesse 2nd hand for it. At this point, a very large number of the a priori probabilities have been eliminated, dropped to 0%. You have eliminated all hands where 2nd hand has both honors (since RHO won the first trick). You have also eliminated all hands where 2nd hand had a void, a stiff, or a doubleton honor . The remaining possibilities will then be the only possible layouts, expanding to cover 100% of the problem space, retaining their relative proportions given by the a priori probabilities.
At this point, there are two ways to make the calculation, and both are valid. In one, you do not identify the honor that won, and count that lone honors are dealt roughly twice as often as the combined situation, for a 2:1 result. In the other, you DO identify the honor that won, which eliminates one of the lone honor possibilities. So in actuality there are only two possibilities, the specific lone honor you saw and combined honors and your opponent chose to win with that specific honor. They are dealt at relatively equal frequency. But your opponent now basically controls how often your 2nd finesse wins depending on which honor won, depending on their tendencies. They can't affect your overall success rate if you stick to your strategy and always finesse, but they can absolutely affect your success rate for a particular honor showing up. Let's say they always play K from KQ. Then if you lost to the K, you will absolutely find that the second finesse only succeeds about half the time, not 2/3 of the time. But if you lost to the Q, now the second finesse wins all the time, since they are never playing the Q from KQ so it has to be Q alone. RC just usually describes the averaged situation where an opponent randomizes and gives the combined odds of 2:1, rather than specific odds of the second finesse succeeding depending on the exact percentage of an opponent's choice from doubleton honor and which of these honors won.
Not after the first finesse lost to 4th hand they don't.
Sure, if an East always played the K from KQ, when he wins with the K the odds are 50-50 on the other card's location IF he NEVER varies. Not that it matters much unless KQ happened to be doubleton....You'd be nuts to gamble on a 50% low end of the scale that E never varies play, when normal play odds for finessing (in this specific situation) range from 50% and up, better by that "and up" than a finesse for a K when you hold A-Q. Interestingly, if an East accidentally dropped a Q from his hand just before you made a double finesse for K-Q, that would be random discovery that increased the odds for the other honor to be in East's hand to 50%.
And you are wrong that at the decision point of the second finesse **"A very large number of the a priori probabilities have been eliminated"**. Very little has been eliminated. The 50% likelihood of divided honors is in full play because an East winning honor is fully consistent with that, as is whichever honor E won with. The 25% chance West had both honors is gone, but that also is consistent and actually essential for divided honors. The belief that very much has changed is bizarre.
That is the beauty of a double finesse. The a priori odds favor you at every stage.