Free, on Sep 3 2010, 03:12 AM, said:
Question to ahydra: does ManU always win? No, sometimes they draw and sometimes they lose. And the rates you're gaining when they win will never be enough to compensate for your losses when they don't win. Calculate it and you'll see! So guess what, betting on ManU winning is a losing option in the long run. This cannot be said about following a percentage line in bridge. But you can compare it with following an anti-percentage line in bridge...
I was referring to them playing one particular match... :/ And the only reason that "always betting on them winning" wouldn't work is because the bookies set the odds to allow them to make a profit of people doing things like that. In bridge the "odds" are the scoring and then the MP or IMP scales which are a lot more favourable to the gambler than a bookie (here I mean "gambler" in the sense of person who takes a chance, not a SEWoG-type gamble), eg why you can afford to go 2 off doubled vs a game and still get a good score (or gamble further that they won't double, and go off several undoubled).
Vampyr: can you describe how the STOP regulations work in competitive auctions (e.g. are they required for all bids?) That may help with thinking time, but it'd slow down play a lot (and people rarely use the STOP cards properly anyway -.- although they would at top-level competitions, so I guess that's not really a concern)
In a similar vein to STOP-card usage, how about just using a more proactive approach to hesitating in general? Particularly with screens, the players could slow the tempo (by ~3-4 sec/call) in competitive situations (defined as being pretty much anything where both sides have bid on the last round/two rounds). Then you'd have a little more time overall to think.
ahydra