helene_t, on 2014-September-02, 02:06, said:
Lawrence/Virgren are addressing a completely different issue than LOTT addresses. LOTT is used in situations in which one doesn't know (or doesn't care) how much strength one's partnership has - when making a LOTT based competitive bid, one does not acess the likelyhood that the contract makes. Just the likelihood that the total number of tricks is high enough that it either makes OR is a good sac.
Lawrence/Virgren's method serves a purpose identical to that of MLTC or fit points, and should be compared to those. It would be meaningful to discuss whether fit points, MLTC or Lawrence/Virgren is more accurate. Comparing those methods to LOTT is like comparing either to sliced bread.
I don't agree with this.
Their method/s(better marketing needed) comprise a two hand evaluation approaches that combine to give a near-perfect description of how many tricks the hands can take, if given full information.
Looking at the two:
1) working points are often hard to gauge at the table - but methods like splinters, game tries etc can give you some part of the picture
2) SST is often easy to gauge at the table, and similar methods can clarify it even further
1) is mainly of use in constructive bidding (but can help eg when thinking of marginal decisions when the vul is such that whether you'll make your contract is a more important question than total tricks)
2) is useful in both constructive and competitive auctions
Obviously we don't have full information on these issues when bidding, but we don't have zero info either, and each approach's value is proportionate to the info we have about it. I prefer that an approach that, even with full information, can't reliably tell you how many tricks either side (or both sides) will take.
Neither subsumes the other, but whichever you prefer, I do think they overlap heavily (as do Lawrence and Virgren - and apparently Larry Cohen, come to that).