returnto index| Kit's article on doubling theory in the September issue inspired meto do a little digging in that area. I'm largely interested in the questionof when an initial double is correct -- especially in the early going wherewe encounter the same positions repeatedly.
To decide if it's right to double, we need to look ahead two rolls to our next opportunity to double. At that point, we are either glad, indifferent, or sorry for whatever cube decision we chose. If the resulting positionis double/take, it doesn't matter whether we doubled or waited -- we can reach the same situation by doubling now. If the position is now double/pass,we're glad if we doubled and regret having waited. The equity swing isthe difference between our equity with our opponent holding a two cubeand one -- which we get now when our opponent passes. Correspondingly, if the resulting position is no-double, we wish we hadn't cubed and are happy if we waited. The equity swing is the difference between the equity with the cube in the middle and the equity with our opponent holding atwo cube. To decide if an initial double is proper, average the equityswings over your possible rolls, properly played, combined with the samefor your opponent. Refer to Kit's article for a more complete explanation. Hands-on experience tells us that a cubeless equity of 0.39 typically corresponds with a borderline initial double. A volatile position should be doubled with a lower equity, while a stable position requires a higherequity to justify a double. The interesting thing about cube turns is that you can gain a lot of equity without being sorry you waited because your opponent still has a take! I've put together some code that generates Jellyfish 3-ply cubeless equities for the positions occurring two rolls down the road from an initial position. These equities are then averaged to reach an estimate of the gain or loss from doubling. Note that this also provides a 5-ply cubeless equity for the initial position. One of the commonest early doubling opportunities starts with an openingsplit of the back men, followed by a 5-5 attack making the three and onepoints, and then a poor roll by the attackee. The result is a pass afterthe following sequences: 5-ply Equity 1. 5-2 24/22 13/8 5-5 8/3(2)* 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.679 1. 6-3 24/18 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.658 1. 6-4 24/18 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.656 1. 6-2 24/18 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.653 1. 5-1 24/18 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.617There's nothing unusual here -- this matches common knowledge, except perhapsfor the 5-1 which is an unusual opening. Here are the doubling equities when the defender fans. After breaking the twenty-four anchor on the opening shake, there will be one, two, orthree blots on the board. The positions are grouped by the number of blotsleft and sorted by the cubeless equity. 5-ply Doubling3 blots Equity Gain 1. 4-3 24/20 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.515 0.221 1. 4-3 24/21 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.475 0.143 1. 3-2 24/21 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.474 0.148 1. 4-1 24/23 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.448 0.084 1. 2-1 24/23 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.442 0.0822 blots 1. 6-3 24/15 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.548 0.208 1. 6-2 24/16 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.538 0.195 1. 6-4 24/14 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.509 0.156 1. 5-4 24/20 13/8 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.450 0.106 1. 5-3 24/21 13/8 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.417 0.051 1. 5-1 24/23 13/8 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.397 0.0091 blot 1. 6-5 24/13 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. Dances 0.371 -0.051These numbers tell us we should double if there's another blot exposedanywhere on the board. Within each grouping, the gain from doubling riseswith the cubeless equity in a relatively smooth way. Doubling gains more for a given cubeless equity if two blots are exposed instead of just oneblot -- this is the effect of Volatility Compare the first entries inthe two and three blot categories. Our cubeless equity is 0.033 lower vs.the extra blot position, but we gain an additional 0.018 equity by doubling.You can see the same effect if you compare positions with equities near0.445 in the above list. Note that the gain from doubling after 5-1 23, 8 sequence is quite small-- so that you can tailor your cube action to suit your temperament and situation with this position. If you think your opponent might Drop after running with 6-5 and then dancing, how often do you have to be right to justify doubling? You'rerisking 0.051 to gain 0.629, so if you're right once out of 13.33 = (0.051+ 0.629) / 0.051, you'll break even. Being wrong twelve times costs you0.612, while being right once earns 0.629 for a net gain of 0.017. Now let's consider the situations where the defender enters, but doesso badly. The most important category here occurs after an opening split to the eighteen point, followed by the 5-5 attack and then a 6-4 or 6-5.After entering, there are two or three plausible options for moving thesix: 5-ply Doubling Equity Gain
1. 6-3 24/18 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)*
2. 6-4 B/15 0.418 0.095
B/21 13/7 0.444 0.162
B/21 10/4 0.457 0.143
1. 6-2 24/18 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-4 B/15 0.407 0.082
B/21 11/5 0.409 0.098
B/21 13/7 0.442 0.166
1. 5-1 24/18 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-4 B/21 13/7 0.402 0.102
B/15 0.403 0.042
1. 6-3 24/18 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-5 B/14 0.398 0.073
B/20 10/4 0.431 0.137
B/20 13/7 0.464 0.218
1. 6-4 24/18 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-4 B/15 0.398 0.020
B/21 9/3 0.429 0.117
B/21 13/7 0.448 0.175
1. 6-4 24/18 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-5 B/14 0.397 0.076
B/20 13/7 0.437 0.182
B/20 9/3 0.472 0.191
1. 5-1 24/18 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-5 B/14 0.385 0.017
B/20 13/7 0.412 0.135
1. 6-2 24/18 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-5 B/14 0.381 0.043
B/20 13/7 0.455 0.209
B/20 11/5 0.468 0.193
The results here are consistent -- the defender should run all the way with the man on the roof, followed by a double and a take. Some points of interest:
5-ply Doubling Equity Gain
1. 5-1 24/18 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 3-2 B/23 18/15 0.291 -0.083
B/23 13/10 0.301 -0.049
1. 6-4 24/18 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 3-2 B/23 18/15 0.266 -0.086
B/23 9/6 0.283 -0.086
B/23 13/10 0.326 0.008
1. 5-1 24/18 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 4-2 B/23 18/14 0.265 -0.108
B/21 18/16 0.265 -0.087
B/23 13/9 0.308 -0.038
1. 6-2 24/18 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 3-2 B/23 11/8 0.264 -0.104
B/23 18/15 0.266 -0.092
1. 6-3 24/18 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 4-2 B/21 18/16 0.246 -0.084
B/23 18/14 0.253 -0.100
B/23 10/6 0.283 -0.086
1. 6-2 24/18 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 4-2 B/23 18/14 0.235 -0.123
B/21 13/11 0.252 -0.109
B/21 18/16 0.255 -0.082
1. 6-3 24/18 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 3-2 B/23 13/10 0.151 -0.204
B/23 18/15 0.260 -0.097
1. 6-4 24/18 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 4-2 B/23 13/9 0.113 -0.235
B/23 18/14 0.237 -0.111
Don't touch that cube! Doubling here turns out to be a costly error. Thechecker plays are getting subtler -- I don't see a rule that covers allthe above cases. However hanging back on the twenty-three is desirable,as is getting off the eighteen, not to mention making a point in the outfield.A couple of points:
5-ply Doubling Equity Gain
1. 6-5 24/13 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 5-1 B/20 6/5 0.263 -0.086
B/20 8/7 0.333 -0.012
1. 5-1 24/23 13/8 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 5-1 B/20 6/5 0.255 -0.089
B/20 8/7 0.287 -0.058
1. 5-4 24/20 13/8 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 2-1 B/23 6/5 0.255 -0.089
B/23 8/7 0.287 -0.058
1. 4-3 24/20 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-4 B/21 20/14 0.225 -0.114
B/15 0.252 -0.068
B/21 10/4 0.267 -0.074
1. 3-2 24/21 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-5 B/14 0.222 -0.120
B/20 11/5 0.243 -0.094
B/20 21/15 0.260 -0.055
1. 4-3 24/21 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 6-5 B/14 0.215 -0.118
B/20 21/15 0.228 -0.085
B/20 9/3 0.290 -0.046
1. 6-5 24/13 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 2-1 B/23 6/5 0.209 -0.158
B/23 8/7 0.273 -0.099
1. 4-3 24/21 13/9 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 3-2 B/23 13/10 0.196 -0.150
B/20 0.201 -0.152
B/23 9/6 0.201 -0.166
1. 3-2 24/21 13/11 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 3-2 B/23 11/8 0.178 -0.186
B/23 13/10 0.194 -0.149
B/20 0.210 -0.140
1. 4-3 24/20 13/10 5-5 8/3(2) 6/1(2)* 2. 4-2 B/21 10/8 0.173 -0.187
B/23 10/6 0.216 -0.146
B/23 13/9 0.218 -0.124
B/23 20/16 0.253 -0.099
I don't see much of interest here -- all of these positions fall into thec ategory of no-double/take.
In summary, after hitting with 5-5 8/3(2), 6/1(2) on move 2, the propercube play is as follows:
- if the defender has two men up - if the defender splits to the eighteen point and then dances - if the defender has one man up and a blot anywhere but the eighteenpoint - if the defender splits to the eighteen point and comes in with 6-4or 6-5 - note that the 6-4 and 6-5 should be played my moving the checker from the roof to the outfield. - all the rest. |