FelicityR, on 2019-December-09, 14:18, said:
Which proves that in an experienced partnership, if you have the range of conventional bids available, you will always outscore players who haven't got these conventions and gadgets at their disposal.
I read in an American bridge magazine recently that many players - a poll was conducted amongst top American players - consider bidding to more important than declarer play and defence put together, some even rating it at 80%, though the usual figure was nearer 60-70%.
My guess is that if one took say the top 500 pairs in the world (tho identifying the bottom 300 of those would be problematic
), and gave each member a set of not-exotic but challenging hands to declare, with identical opposition bidding and opening leads, 8-900 or more of the 1000 players would adopt essentially the same line of play. A few would get it 'wrong', but very few, and a slightly greater number would find a slight edge, if there were one.
Give those same pairs a set of complex bidding hands, again not exotic but challenging, and you'd get scores and maybe hundreds of auctions, since almost all top expert partnerships have many idiosyncratic variations in their methods.
Put another way: it is mathematically possible to demonstrate the best single dummy line: where variations may arise is usually because of the inferences a player may draw from the auction, or the defence, but the starting point will be the same for everyone. By contrast, it is impossible (or as close to impossible as to make no difference) to mathematically prove the superiority of one complex well designed method over another. One method may be clearly better on some hand types, but will inevitably be worse on others. One may deal better with interference than another, but be worse on unobstructed auctions, and so on.
Also different players have different tastes and willingness to memorize system...some will believe that it is better to cut down on complexity to minimize accidents, at the cost of making the system less comprehensive, while others will gladly take on the memory load.
Now, go down to the club level and my view is that the average player bids terribly and plays/defends no better.
I have watched non-expert games on BBO, usually when a friend or friends are playing, and I have also looked at the bidding and play of hands when I have been playing imps against friends, scored against the greater field...seeing how it came about that we won or lost a surprising number of imps. Many is the time when the result was average, but the players got there by a combination of errors that ended up cancelling each other out.
I think bidding may still be more important for average players than either defence or declarer, because players tend to be in the auction on more than half the hands, but defend only 50% of the time, on average, and declare only about 25% of the time. Thus there is simply more opportunity to screw up the bidding.
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