Fred lists a hierarchy of play, in which each level supercedes the previous level. These are:Kasi said:I doubt if Fred included 11 vs 10 as an example. What other plays did he recommend? Did he really suggest 12 vs 2 or 3?
4) Basic Strategy
3) Hand Composition
2) Board Composition
1) The Count
A few of the plays he mentions include deviating from basic strategy on:
12 vs 4
13 vs 2
16 vs 10
9 vs 2
A/7 vs 2
A/8 vs 6
11 vs A
In regard to doubling 11 vs 10, it's not one of Fred's plays but it is one of mine. In my experience, with a ton of high cards on the board, more often than not you'll double and get stuck with 13 (or some such total) and the dealer will draw to a made hand. Doesn't always work out that way, but too often it does.
Consider the OPP system. The guy who came up with it determined that, on average, each hand should have one high card and one low card. With 8 tens distributed to 4 players, that's way above average. For the player who doesn't count, that's information to carefully consider.
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