msjennifer, on 2016-November-06, 00:05, said:
With due respect to Helene t,I wish to point out that there are 7 (seven) losers in the 3442 hand given by her,Any SST or LST is made only if ones hand has 6 (six) losers.Suppose partner produces xxx,KJxx,Kxx,xxx will he not respond 2 Hearts? Or is he supposed to bid 1NT to show a balanced hand.!!!Your side can't score more than 8 or sometimes 9 tricks ! That your opponent lady smilingly and politely ignored your advice was fair enough.
Let's count them...
helene_t, on 2016-November-05, 05:11, said:
Axx - 2 losers
AQxx - 1 loser
Axxx - 2 losers
Ax - 1 loser
2+1+2+1 = ? Seven?!?? Quite aside from your being flat out wrong, you miss the point Helene was making that the MLTC is clearly much more accurate:
Axx - 1.5 losers
AQXX - 1 loser
Axxx - 1.5 losers
Ax - 1 loser
5 losers is a far more sensible evaluation of this hand.
As has been pointed out many times, the MLTC is equivalent to a point count using a 3/2/1 (or 4.5/3/1.5) base with 6/3/1 (9/4.5/1.5) points for shortages and Qx or singleton K/Q counted as zero. The original LTC on the other hand is like using Milton but counting aces and queens (except Qx/Q) as kings (3 points) (and still ignoring K bare) and then adding shortage points as 9/6/3. It should be obvious to anyone but the most inexperienced beginner that this is pretty silly. The MLTC is ok but less flexible and (arguably) less accurate than a properly tuned point count method, notwithstanding that some BBFers are supporters of it. Noone with any sense supports the original LTC as an accurate evaluation method. Its benefit comes from simplicity but it is only right that users understand the limitations of the method and how to improve it in cases such as the one Helene presented.