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Rule of 20 Something else to be dumped?

#1 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2012-October-26, 22:48

Is the Rule of 20 something else that needs to be dumped? I have had plenty of bad results of my own using this rule, for one very simple reason: How on earth is partner supposed to know that I have opened the bidding using it? Again, from my own experiences, I can add this –
1. Most of my gains from using this rule come when opener places the final contract.
2. Conversely, most of my losses from using this rule come when partner places the final contract.

The latest bad result occurred at our local club earlier this week. As the dealer, I held 10 cards in the black suits and exactly 10 HCP. So I duly opened the bidding with 1 using the Rule of 20. Partner held a big hand and blasted straight into 4NT RKCB. After 5 from me (1 keycard), partner placed the final contract in 6 with only 1 keycard missing. The contract failed by 1, the missing keycard and a second trick in one of the other suits, when my 10 count just didn’t hold that vital additional value that partner was expecting.

What sort of experiences have others had with this rule? Are your gains outweighing your losses?
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#2 User is offline   nigel_k 

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Posted 2012-October-26, 23:01

With 10 HCP and 10 cards in two suits I would open most of the time. When something like this goes wrong, we really need to see the full hand before reaching any conclusion.
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#3 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2012-October-26, 23:14

I agree that one should not make decisions about the merits of a practice/rule/guide based on one hand. This is even more so when we don't even know the hand!

There are very few hands that warrant keycard in response to a 1-level opening. I wouldn't be the least surprised to see that few here would endorse the 4N call.

Having said that, I feel that the rule of 20 is truly horrible. Good players don't need it and bad players don't know how to cater to the fact that it simply isn't a rule of general application, because it ignores both honour location and the difference between, say, 2 Q's and an A.

It treats Jxxxx A Jxxxx Ax the same as AJxxx x AJxxx xx which is plainly silly to any beyond the beginner level. If you know enough to not use it on the 1st hand, why do you need it on the 2nd?
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#4 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2012-October-26, 23:51

Another big drawback that I have encountered using the Rule of 20 are those times when the partnership hands do not dovetail. You end up playing –
1. In a NT contract short on HCP
2. Playing in a suit contract 1-level too high.
In both 1 + 2 the contract ends up failing by at least 1 trick. The situation in 2 arises because the Rule of 20 is geared towards suit contracts. When the bidding goes e.g. 1-1-2-2NT-3, often you are now 1-level too high on a misfit hand short on HCP.

Anyway, these are some of my own experiences using this rule. I think its time to chuck it out.
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#5 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 02:08

View Post32519, on 2012-October-26, 23:51, said:


Anyway, these are some of my own experiences using this rule. I think it's time to chuck it out.


Then go ahead and chuck it out. You don't need permission from this forum.
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#6 User is offline   akwoo 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 03:40

You should only use rule of 20 with a partnership agreement. I think it is a good agreement for a partnership to open most 10hcp 5521 hands, but I wouldn't open most such hands with most of the little old ladies at my club.
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#7 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 04:12

As with many of these things, you need to discuss them with partner, and they need to be ready for that sort of opener. As somebody who opens most rule of 19 hands and has had this discussion, you learn to be a bit more selective about how you respond, and using Blackwood immediately is very very rare.

Post the hand that caused the problem, and you'll probably find that the opening bid was not the cause.
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#8 User is offline   manudude03 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 09:48

View Post32519, on 2012-October-26, 22:48, said:

The latest bad result occurred at our local club earlier this week. As the dealer, I held 10 cards in the black suits and exactly 10 HCP. So I duly opened the bidding with 1 using the Rule of 20. Partner held a big hand and blasted straight into 4NT RKCB.


I suspect that's your problem.

One of the first things I tell improvers is that "rules" such as rule of 20, second hand low, third hand high etc. are only general guidelines, and that they should think about the hand instead of woodenly following them. As Mike said, Jxxxx Ax Jxxxx A is very different from AJxxx xx AJxxx x even though they both satisfy the rule of 20. If nothing else, just ask yourself if it is worth as much as a typical balanced 12 count (or 11/13 depending on your opening requirements). If yes, then open it, if not, don't.
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#9 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 10:19

View Postmikeh, on 2012-October-26, 23:14, said:

Having said that, I feel that the rule of 20 is truly horrible.


I disagree with Mike on this (again) but do think that it's the most misused guidline on the planet.

Along the lines of those that play Kantar 2 instead of nmf, Kantar wrote 40 pages on it and most only read the first paragraph.

ie. if you use the rule of 20 on 10 counts with 2 5-card suits and one of them is spades you are wrong (pass then come in) but if you have short spades it's often now or never. Vulnerability, body cards etc. matter A LOT.

Those that stop thinking after counting to 20 aren't likely to do much better regardless and jumping to 4nt after a 1 bid is a failure to efficiently use system too that could well be the real culprit.
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#10 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 10:52

View Postggwhiz, on 2012-October-27, 10:19, said:

ie. if you use the rule of 20 on 10 counts with 2 5-card suits and one of them is spades you are wrong (pass then come in) but if you have short spades it's often now or never. Vulnerability, body cards etc. matter A LOT.

IMO, it is more about whether it looks like an opening bid than whether we have spades or not.
"Bidding Spades to show spades can work well." (Kenberg)
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#11 User is offline   Mhoram 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 11:38

I'm new to the rule of 20, but isn't it just another way to count the same thing? A 10-point 5521 hand under Goren would get a point for the doubleton and two for the singleton for a total of 13, and be worth opening (as long as something else didn't knock it down a point under his system, like a lack of aces). Figuring a point for each long suit, the way I was taught it's done in Standard American, makes it 12 points and a possible opener today.

So on this hand at least, the rule of 20 seems to say the same thing that the other methods say: it's a potential opener, but just barely, so use your head.
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#12 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 11:54

It's similar but under Audrey Grant you don't count points for shortness until AFTER you find a trump fit. She uses length points for opening and plus 1 for each of the 5-card suits brings you to 12 and just short of an opening. The rule of 20 is that close but you have to move on to the next few paragraphs on various factors like suit quality, honour distribution and quite a few more.

IMO, the rule of 20 opens the door to devloping sound judgement so you can forget about it and play like mikeh and the aquaman. None of these good players use it anymore but they certainly don't go by Audreys or Gorens evaluation. I just think it's a better stepping stone if used as intended.

ps. I bet a buck that the culprit in the op's hand is the leap to 4nt instead of "system", not the opening bid. Although Mikeh hates the rule of 20, he is quite capable of opening light on shape for his own reasons. Better ones gained through experience but you gotta start somewhere.
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#13 User is offline   paua 

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Posted 2012-October-27, 14:24

View Post32519, on 2012-October-26, 22:48, said:

Is the Rule of 20 something else that needs to be dumped? I have had plenty of bad results of my own using this rule, for one very simple reason: How on earth is partner supposed to know that I have opened the bidding using it? Again, from my own experiences, I can add this –
1. Most of my gains from using this rule come when opener places the final contract.
2. Conversely, most of my losses from using this rule come when partner places the final contract.

The latest bad result occurred at our local club earlier this week. As the dealer, I held 10 cards in the black suits and exactly 10 HCP. So I duly opened the bidding with 1 using the Rule of 20. Partner held a big hand and blasted straight into 4NT RKCB. After 5 from me (1 keycard), partner placed the final contract in 6 with only 1 keycard missing. The contract failed by 1, the missing keycard and a second trick in one of the other suits, when my 10 count just didn’t hold that vital additional value that partner was expecting.

What sort of experiences have others had with this rule? Are your gains outweighing your losses?


Use the Rule of 22 instead, also including quick tricks.
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#14 User is offline   rduran1216 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 10:11

I'm a fairly strong adherent to this rule in general, but like all rules, like LOTT, losing trick count, etc. You use the rule with some discretion. I'm also a strong adherent to pearson point openers in 4th chair with solid results. It just depends, and that's a good guideline for most bridge rules.
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#15 User is offline   cargobeep 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 14:08

In all cases of using the rule, logical evaluation of your hand always tends to prevail in my opinion.

One other trick I like is the idea of voids during the rule of 20.

QJT976
JT9
KQ87

On this hand, I only have 9 HCP, but I do have 2 10's. In theory, that's about 25% of the HCP in the deck, hardly too good. But I really own 50% of the deck. The A,K,Q and J are really all owned by me. Any positive spade response and I am raising to game without question.
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#16 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 14:19

Everything I read thereafter seems to validate the statements of MikeH in post #3.
"Bidding Spades to show spades can work well." (Kenberg)
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#17 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 17:02

View Postcargobeep, on 2012-October-28, 14:08, said:

In all cases of using the rule, logical evaluation of your hand always tends to prevail in my opinion.

One other trick I like is the idea of voids during the rule of 20.

QJT9765
JT9
KQ87

On this hand, I only have 9 HCP, but I do have 2 10's. In theory, that's about 25% of the HCP in the deck, hardly too good. But I really own 50% of the deck. The A,K,Q and J are really all owned by me. Any positive spade response and I am raising to game without question.

With that hand, you ought to be calling the director.
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#18 User is offline   CarlRitner 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 17:21

That hand doesn't have 0 diamonds, it has -0 diamonds.
Ergo, the extra spade.
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#19 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 18:57

View Postaguahombre, on 2012-October-28, 14:19, said:

Everything I read thereafter seems to validate the statements of MikeH in post #3.


Which includes this:

It treats Jxxxx A Jxxxx Ax the same as AJxxx x AJxxx xx

That statement is just REALLY wrong if you scratch below the surface. If you disagree with it so strongly it would be more helpful if you told us why.
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#20 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2012-October-28, 21:13

View Postcargobeep, on 2012-October-28, 14:08, said:

On this hand, I only have 9 HCP, but I do have 2 10's. In theory, that's about 25% of the HCP in the deck, hardly too good. But I really own 50% of the deck. The A,K,Q and J are really all owned by me. Any positive spade response and I am raising to game without question.

Unless some of those diamonds are also owned by your partner, in which case you have duplication of values. If he has the top ones you may be able to use them for pitches, but if he only owns the lower ones they're almost totally wasted.

This is why we tend to downgrade hands that have shortness in suits that partner has bid. When making opening bids based on distribution, we're hoping that our shortness isn't duplicating partner's values, since we don't have any information about his hand yet.

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