Thursday, October 4, 2012

Fun Flush Facts


Cribbage Pro player “sm15” sent me a message asking about the pegging advantage of playing a flush. That’s a great question, and got me thinking about flushes in general.

How likely is your opponent to have a flush?

About 3.0% of dealer’s hands are flushes. Pone’s hand holds a flush about 3.3% of the time.

Pone’s initial lead gives a clue as to whether or not they have a flush. A lead 5 is only 1.4% likely to be part of a flush. A lead 2 or 3 is 4.0% likely to be part of a flush. Basically if a lead card is more likely to be part of a trap (see the “Should you pair your opponent’s lead?”), it’s less likely to be part of a flush.

How likely are you to have a flush in your crib?

Remember that a flush in the crib only counts if the cut card is the same suit as the cards in the crib, so it’s significantly less common than a flush in the hand. Around 0.17% of cribs hold a flush (1 in 588). Even when dealer tosses two suited cards in her crib she still only ends up with a flush 0.81% of the time (1 in 123). When pone tosses suited cards in the crib she ends up giving dealer a flush 0.77% of time time (1 in 130).

Should you toss suited cards in the crib?

If it’s not going to make a difference to your hand, you might as well toss suited cards as dealer, and off-suit cards as pone. Usually all things are not equal, though, and pone might be faced with the choice of splitting up her hand to avoid giving dealer a flush. Changing your hand to avoid throwing suited cards is a pretty subtle play. When pone tosses suited cards into dealer’s crib she has a 0.77% chance of giving dealer 5 points, which works out to an average of 0.04 points.

Do situations exist where that 0.04 would make a difference? Sure. When pone discards 8-6 she gives dealer, on average, 0.01 points more than if she’d discarded 8-9. But if pone’s 8-9 is suited it might make sense for her to toss an off-suit 8-6 instead. That would offset the extra points from the 8-6, penalizing dealer an average of 0.03 points. Those three-one-hundredths-of-a-point could win you the game, but you've probably got more important cribbage-related things to worry about.

The Jack is a special case. Imagine you’re playing as pone and your hand holds: J, J, 6, 7, 8, 4. The right toss is probably the 4 and a Jack. But which Jack? If you toss dealer the J/4 you’ll give her a 10/46 (10 diamonds left in the deck after the Jack, 6, and 4, and 46 cards left in the deck) chance of scoring 1 for his knobs, plus a 0.77% chance of giving her 5 points for a flush. That works out to about 0.256 points.

If you toss the J/4 you’re giving her a 12/46 (12 clubs left in the deck / 46 cards left in the deck) chance of scoring 1 for his knobs, which works out to about 0.261 points. Throwing the off-suit Jack gives dealer an extra 0.005 points that you’d just as soon she not have! So if you’re going to toss a Jack into your opponent’s crib, consider tossing the suit that shows up most often in your hand, even if it might give dealer a flush.

How big is the pegging advantage?

To answer sm15's original question, the results depend on the hand being played, and who’s playing it (dealer or pone). For instance, we've seen that when dealers play a suited 6-7-8-9 they peg about 1% more points, while their opponents peg about 9% fewer points. A dealer holding suited A-4-Q-K will peg about 1% fewer points, while her opponent will peg about 7% fewer. And when pone holds A-4-Q-K she’ll peg the same number of points whether or not its suited, but dealer will peg 5% fewer points if pone’s A-4-Q-K is suited. (All of these statistics are based on several hundred examples of pone playing suited versions of those hands)

Taking into account every possible hand, dealer will peg about 1% fewer points if her cards are suited than if they’re not; and dealer’s opponent will peg about 4% fewer points if the cards are suited. If pone’s cards are suited, pone will peg the same as if they weren't suited, but her opponent will peg about 1.5% fewer points. So the pegging advantage to a flush is more about limiting your opponent’s pegging than it is about increasing your own.

Questions?

What do you think, sm15? Is that what you were expecting? Does anyone else have any questions they’d like answered?

Editor's Note: This is a guest post by Aaron Harsh continuing the series on cribbage strategy and tips. Aaron lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife Stacy and daughter Audrey. He spends his evenings analyzing cribbage strategy for Fuller Systems, and his days analyzing television viewership for Rentrak Corporation's Advanced Media & Information group. You can play him on Cribbage Pro Online as user "aaronhars", or in person at American Cribbage Congress grassroots club #28 (Oregon's Finest).

Thursday, September 20, 2012

What Card Should I Lead? Lightning Round Edition


One of the great things about our huge database of cribbage games is that we can identify hands that are frequently misplayed. Today we're going to give a high level overview of a few of those hands. Keep in mind that these results aren't our opinions -- they're the actual results across a sample of millions of cribbage hands. Some of these results are just as surprising to us as they are to you.

A-4-X-X

About 4.8% of pone (non-dealer) hands will hold an ace, a 4, and two 10s/face cards. (From now on we'll use "X" as a shorthand for "a 10 or a face card"). Most players lead the 4 from this hand, but around 7% lead the ace. The players that lead the ace, on average, have a 0.55 point pegging advantage: they peg 0.18 points more, and their opponents peg 0.37 points fewer.

Why is the ace a better lead? There are pros and cons to either lead, but our data shows that by far the biggest factor is that dealers are less likely to pair an initial ace. Of the tens of thousands of A-4-X-X hands that we've analyzed we've seen that the dealer pairs a lead 4 at 19.93% of the time, but only pairs a lead ace 12.84% of the time. An interesting and common case is when both players have A-4-X-X hands. Here's how the pegging plays out in that scenario when dealer is willing to pair a 4 but not an ace:

Pone leads a 4


Pone
Dealer
Points
4
4
+2 for dealer (pair for 2)
X
X
A
A
+3 for dealer (pair for 2 and a go)
X
X
+1 for dealer (go)


Pone leads an Ace


Pone
Dealer
Points
A
X
4
+2 for pone (15 for 2)
4
+2 for dealer (pair for 2)
X
A
+1 for dealer (go)
X
X
+1 for dealer (go)

Leading the 4 gives dealer 6 points to pone's 0 for a net disadvantage of 6. Leading the ace gives dealer 5 points to pone's 1 for a net disadvantage of 4. Executive summary: lead the ace from A-4-X-X.

A-7-8-9

Most players lead the 8, but leading the ace gives a 0.78 point advantage (pone pegs 0.38 points more, and dealer pegs 0.40 points fewer). The data shows dealers making a couple mistakes when pone leads the ace:

  • Dealers holding 5-X-X-X see the ace and expect pone to have a 4. Dealer plays her 5 to avoid giving pone a a 15-2. Pone plays a 9 on dealer's 5 and pegs 15 for 2 points.
  • Dealers holding middle cards (6s through 9s) end up trading runs back and forth with pone, and usually lose in this situation

Executive summary: lead the ace.

A-A-5-9, and A-6-8-9

At the risk of seeming predictable, we're going to suggest leading the ace for these two hands. A-A-5-9 is one of the few hands that most players are playing properly: 50.3% of Cribbage Pro players lead the ace from this hand.

Leading the ace from A-A-5-9 averages a 0.50 point advantage over leading the 9. Leading the ace from A-6-8-9 averages a 0.57 point advantage over the 8 (the most popular lead, and the second best choice).

Executive summary: lead the ace.

5-5-6-7

The last hand we'll look at today is 5-5-6-7. Most players correctly lead the 7, but about a third lead the 6. Leading the 7 gives a 0.57 point advantage over the 6.

The big story here is that pone comes out better if dealer plays an 8 on pone's 7 than if dealer plays a 9 on pone's 6. When dealer plays an 8 on pone's 7, dealer averages 7.59 points of pegging to pone's 3.68 (for a net -3.91 loss for pone). When dealer plays a 9 on pone's six, dealer averages 5.99 pegs to pone's 0.88 (net -5.11 point loss for pone).

That's it for today

Disagree with these results? Want to see the results for another hand? Leave us a comment below and we'll get back to you.

Editor's Note: This is a guest post by Aaron Harsh continuing the series on cribbage strategy and tips. Aaron lives in Portland, Oregon with his wife Stacy and daughter Audrey. He spends his evenings analyzing cribbage strategy for Fuller Systems, and his days analyzing television viewership for Rentrak Corporation's Advanced Media & Information group. You can play him on Cribbage Pro Online as user "aaronhars", or in person at American Cribbage Congress grassroots club #28 (Oregon's Finest).