barmar, on 2012-August-30, 03:18, said:
No, but I still think 2 IMPs/board is a significant overestimate.
It is all of the information that is worth an estimated 2 IMPs. And only when the board has been previously played. Say I pick up:
♦4
♣K
♥2
♣9
♠A
♠K
♠J
♦3
♣A
♠8
♦Q
♦J
♣2. I would think as follows (were I so inclined):
a) That spade order AKJ in sequence is interesting. I think they were probably trumps, and declarer did not finesse the queen. Perhaps partner has it, or we have 9, and the singleton queen fell, which is why three rounds were played. If we agree spades, I will not bother asking for the queen of trumps.
b) The cards were probably shuffled quickly at the other table, as I would have expected the trumps to have been played earlier than that.
c) The club king and ace are separated. They might have been shuffled apart, but more likely they were not played on consecutive tricks. They probably were not trumps. Alternatively clubs were led, and we won with one of those, and the other was played later.
d) the spade 8 probably ruffed something, which is why it is not next to its other colleagues.
e) If partner has the
♦A, then the diamond finesse is probably right, as the
♦ Q was followed by the J.
f) based on the above I would bid a 25% slam and expect to make it.
In all those cases, the possibility is that the cards were shuffled to that sequence. But that will occur much less often than two or three cards having been played in that order before.
Perhaps, I can spot you 2 IMPs per board, only on those boards which are played first at the other table. We choose our partners. My compass-mate's cards are shuffled just into three parts and interchanged. Yours are put into a machine. £10 an IMP at TGRs?
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar