- Almost always, the actual lead and signalling agreements did not matter. What does matter a lot is being on the same page as partner. Conveying some amount of information accurately beats attempting to convey a lot of information through uncertain means.
- Nearly all players around me picked a set of carding methods when young/just beginning, and changed it up maybe once or twice in their entire bridge career. Most people struggle tremendously to switch between different agreements, and struggle to reason through the implications of a change in agreements.
- It is very difficult to find sources motivating one set of lead agreements over another. Almost all the sources I did find were little more than some cherry-picked example deals without acknowledging possible downsides, and/or "obviously it is better and the experts play this way".
To me this is quite unsatisfactory. I am really eager to learn more about differences in carding methods, along with their possible benefits and costs. I have found precisely one book that claims to investigate exactly this - "Systems in Defence" by Lukasz Slawinski - and I am not sure it is definitive. As a complicating factor, every bridge player has some just-so story prepared to explain why the signals they have been playing for 20 years are great. Obviously, if this is the case for everybody even while playing different methods, it casts some doubt on claims of relative merits of the treatments. I am looking for more thorough analysis on leads and carding methods - why pick one set over another, when do they win, when do they lose, what are we trying to achieve or which holdings are we catering for? This thread hopefully can spark a discussion, or suggest sources with more information on the topic.
These are (some of, I'm sure I have forgotten others) the carding agreements I've played over the years. I've only listed the names and a brief explanation, rather than the full explanation, as that would become very long very quickly.
Leads:
- 4th best leads.
- Attitude leads (low from Hxx or longer, high from empty suits).
- 1st/3rd/5th leads.
- Polish leads (2nd/4th, choosing 2nd from an empty 4(+) suit).
- Journalist leads.
- MUD.
- Top of a sequence.
- Top of an interior sequence.
- Rusinow (versus NT, versus trump, or both).
- Ace from ace-king/king from ace-king.
- Ace attitude, king count/ace count, king attitude.
- Honours request unblock versus NT.
Carding agreements:
- Upside down/standard attitude.
- Upside down/standard count.
- Attitude on first discard.
- Count on first discard.
- Lavinthal(/McKenney) on first discard.
- Roman Lavinthal on first discard.
- Revolving discards.
- Lavinthal "in specific obvious situations".
- Second/third hand lowest of a sequence.
- Second/third hand lowest of two connected honours, highest of 3(+).
- (Standard or Reverse) Oddball/Smith Echo - by one hand, or by both hands.
- Lavinthal in the trump suit.
- Count in the trump suit.
- Attitude shifts in suit.
- 1st/3rd/5th shifts in suit.
- Polish shifts in suit.
I've also played a bunch of these with more complicated conditions, such as "standard signals trick one, upside down for 2-13", or "attitude leads in suits we have supported, 1st/3rd/5th leads otherwise" or "at the 5-level, change up our ace and king lead agreements" or different rules for suit shifts through declarer and through dummy, and more. In the Netherlands it is very popular to play different agreements versus NT and trump suits, which seems reasonable (why should they be the same?) but I would like to have a much better understanding of the quantitative gains and losses from this approach.
Then there are more complicated questions, such as
- Do we signal to suggest a defence, or to indicate a holding so that partner may decide on a defence?
- How do your signals change in meaning as more information is revealed during the play (or during the auction?!), and how do we make sure our partnership stays on the same page as this happens?
- How do we disclose all this to our opponents?
Lastly there are quite a few agreements I've seen that I have never played but would be very interested in hearing why people adopt them. This includes, for example:
- Suit preference trick one.
- The obvious shift principle.
- Nonstandard signals, such as Slawinski Leads or Auken - von Arnim's signal against NT.
- Coded 9s and 10s, or power leads.
My current understanding is that, for pretty much all of these, people play them almost exclusively because it is what they have always played and it is what their teachers played when they were learning the game. Do we have anything better?