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  2. Strong club system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strong_club_system

    The Strong Club System is a set of bidding conventions and agreements used in the game of contract bridge and is based upon an opening bid of 1 ♣ as being an artificial forcing bid promising a strong hand. [1] The strong 1 ♣ opening is assigned a minimum strength promising 16 or more high card points. All other bids would therefore be ...

  3. Duplicate bridge movements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplicate_bridge_movements

    If r is the number of rounds and s is the number of rounds in which all tables arrow switch, the pairs who play as opponents in the rounds that are not arrow switched have a relative influence of (r-1) for the board group played head to head, -(r-1-2s) for board groups played in opposite direction at different tables, and 2s for rounds played ...

  4. Laws of Duplicate Bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laws_of_Duplicate_Bridge

    The first Laws of Duplicate Contract Bridge were published in 1928. [1] They were revised in 1933, 1935, 1943, 1949, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1997, 2007 and 2017. [2] The Laws are effective worldwide for all duplicate bridge tournaments sponsored by WBF, zonal, national and subordinate organizations (which includes most bridge clubs).

  5. Contract bridge probabilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract_bridge_probabilities

    Suppose East is known to have 7 spades from the bidding and after seeing dummy you deduce West to hold 2 spades; then if your two lines of play are to hope either for diamonds 5-3 or clubs 4-2, the a priori probabilities are 47% and 48% respectively but (,,,) % and (,,,) % so now the club line is significantly better than the diamond line.

  6. List of bidding systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bidding_systems

    This is a list of bidding systems used in contract bridge. [1] [2] Systems listed have either had an historical impact on the development of bidding in the game or have been or are currently being used at the national or international levels of competition.

  7. Baron convention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baron_convention

    The Baron Three Clubs is an alternative to the responder using Stayman over a 2NT opening bid. The responder will have five points or more and an unbalanced hand. The responder bids 3 ♣, which asks opener to bid his four-card suits in ascending order. If clubs are the only four-card suit, the opener bids 3NT.

  8. Precision Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_Club

    Other popular Precision variations on opening bids are using a strong 1NT (14–16 is most common), using 2 ♣ to show only a 6+ club suit and expanding the possible hand patterns for the 2 ♦ bid to include the usual 4414 and 44–0–5 as well as 431–5 and 341–5,1 ♦ bid promises at least 2 diamonds.

  9. Neuberg formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuberg_formula

    [1] Although the objective behind the formula is of questionable soundness, the formula itself follows from well-defined mathematical assumptions, and is almost universally applied in computer-scored bridge tournaments. A board might have been played fewer times than others because: the movement was not completed, or; there was a phantom pair, or

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