Esoterica
Perfect Bidding by Don Kersey
Many bridge players have seen the very large number of possible bridge deals:
53,644,737,765,488,792,839,237,440,000.
Less familiar is the much larger number of possible bridge auctions:
128,745,650,347,030,683,120,231,926,111,609,371,363,122,697,557.
Years ago, a letter to The Bridge World raised the question
of whether a cooperative four-player bidding system could be devised that would
allow the complete determination of all four hands. In this note, we construct
such a system.
It will be terminologically useful to recall that a bid is any
call except pass, double, or redouble.
Arrange the 52 cards of the deck in some order (for the purposes
of this note, we will list the suits in descending order, so that the first
card is the spade ace, the second the spade king, . . . , the fourteenth the
heart ace, . . . , the fifty-second the club deuce). Now, with the bid of 1
club, we associate the first card in our list, the ace of spades. With each
subsequent step in the bidding (up to 6 clubs), we associate two cards;
so the 1 diamond bid is associated with the king and queen of spades, 1 heart
with the jack and ten of spades, and so on. In this way, the bid of 6 clubs
is associated with the 4 and 3 of clubs; we don't associate the 2 of clubs with
any bid.
The opening bid in our system will always be made by the owner
of the ace of spades, and the bid chosen will indicate information about subsequent
consecutive cards in our ordering that player holds as well; whichever bid opener
makes, the message is "I have all cards associated with this bid and all lower
bids, but I don't have both cards associated with the next bidding step."
For example, a player holding AKQ107 of spades will open the bidding with 1
diamond, indicating the A, the K and Q, but not both the J and 10.
All calls between bids (passes, doubles, and redoubles) are used
to determine the location of the two cards associated with the next available
bidding step (let's call that next bid "A"). Once these two cards are located,
the bid that is actually chosen (call it "B"; B may be the same bid as A, or
it may be higher) resembles the opening bid, in that it says "Now we all know
where the 2 cards associated with level A are located; furthermore, I have all
the cards associated with any bids higher than A up to B, but I don't have both
cards associated with the next bid after B." For example, if South has A9 of
spades and West has KQJ1085 of spades, then South will open the bidding with
1 club (showing the A, denying the KQ combination) and West will bid 1 heart
(showing the KQ combination, and the J10 as well, but denying the 98 combination).
It remains to see how to use the calls between bids to locate
the two cards associated with the next bidding step--of these two cards, call
the one that is first in our list F and the one that is second S. Suppose that
South, for example, has just made a bid, announcing the location of certain
cards, but denying holding both F and S. Then the pattern of the subsequent
auction is:
West will bid with both key cards, double with one, or pass
with neither.
After West's double, North will bid with F (then West has
S), redouble with S (then West has F, and East can bid, as both cards are located),
or pass with neither. Over North's pass, East will bid with F (then West has
S), or pass otherwise. Over East's pass, South will bid with S (then West has
F), or redouble otherwise. Over South's redouble, West will bid with F (then
East has S), or pass with S (then South has F, and North can bid, as both cards
are located).
After West's pass (showing neither F nor S), North will bid
with both, or pass otherwise. Over North's pass, East will bid with both, or
double otherwise. Over East's double, South will redouble with F (then whoever
has S will bid), or pass otherwise. Over South's pass, West will always pass,
and North will bid with S (then East has F), or redouble otherwise. Over North's
redouble, East will bid with F (then South has S) or pass otherwise. Over East's
pass, South will bid with S (then North has F), or pass otherwise. Finally,
over South's pass, West can bid, since it is now known that North has F and
East has S.