Yet another dubious and unilateral slam try
#1
Posted 2019-May-16, 13:29
Luckily I only encounter GIB as a partner when some human drops out and thus have relatively little interest in how it bids or plays.
In this case my bidding was rudimental (30s tournament and justifiable fears) but I still don't think it merited a jump to 6♠ on that 5 hcp 5-card quacky hand.
FWIW, all three who played 3NT did make it all the same, for a top.
More worthy of note is that GIB went down 6♠-5 where ♠ makes 9 tricks double dummy and 2 of 3 humans made 10.
#2
Posted 2019-May-16, 14:16
Even opposite a human bidder your 3N bid is about 4 kings light.
I would consider it a bug if GIB _didn't_ slam here. It has 5 more HCP and 2 more spades than promised.
#3
Posted 2019-May-16, 14:26
#4
Posted 2019-May-16, 14:37
TylerE, on 2019-May-16, 14:16, said:
Even opposite a human bidder your 3N bid is about 4 kings light.
I would consider it a bug if GIB _didn't_ slam here. It has 5 more HCP and 2 more spades than promised.
I agree 3NT is clumsy, opposite a human partner I would not have bid that way.
What would 2NT or 3♣ mean to GIB here?
#5
Posted 2019-May-16, 14:50
#6
Posted 2019-May-16, 14:57
TylerE, on 2019-May-16, 14:50, said:
Thanks, but I fear pass (justified) of a direct 3♣.
What would GIB bid over a direct 2NT? I feared pass here too.
#7
Posted 2019-May-16, 15:01
TylerE, on 2019-May-16, 14:16, said:
smerriman, on 2019-May-16, 14:26, said:
Any HCP definition for 3NT above 25-26 HCP is just crazy from a bridge odds point of view. The odds of a 25-26 point hand are already minuscule. The odds of 27 HCP or more go down by more than 50% for each additional point.
e.g.
Odds of 26 HCP hand is .012%
Odds of 28 HCP hand is .0019%
Even if GIB plays 3NT as 25-32 HCP, the hand will be 25-26 a very large majority of the time. So why does GIB assume 3NT is a maximum when there is no fit? Or maybe GIB is adding distribution points??? Again, how can you assign distribution points when you have no fit? Maybe hearts is the correct contract, or 6NT.
No matter how you look at it, GIB's bidding needs improvement.
#11
Posted 2019-May-17, 02:21
#12
Posted 2019-May-17, 03:18
msjennifer, on 2019-May-17, 02:21, said:
My rapid assessment was that 3NT does have some chances, based on the auction: diamonds may well be 6-2 and then partner showing spades looks quite likely to have 4333. In any case this is a short timed 6 boarder played for fun on a tablet, not the Bermuda Bowl, and I have no fear of offending rbbot partner. With any luck I will get to play the 3nt and it might be interesting.
#13
Posted 2019-May-17, 07:05
pescetom, on 2019-May-16, 13:29, said:
Nobody has comments on this?
I expected GIB to do quite well here.
Has something changed in the minimum level of play, or were his simulations thrown by the offshape 2♦ opening?
#14
Posted 2019-May-17, 07:27
nige1, on 2019-May-16, 20:00, said:
Thanks. Unfortunately I was playing on a tablet where studying an explanation requires some nerve because if you just lift your finger after reading then it becomes a bid. I guess I just have to steel myself and swipe.
#15
Posted 2019-May-17, 09:23
Requiring 25+ for 3nt is too much. Overcall 2nt is up to maybe 18. Double then 2nt should be about 19-21, therefore 3nt should be some 22-26 or so.
#17
Posted 2019-May-17, 16:44
TylerE, on 2019-May-17, 11:34, said:
No, I meant dbl then 3nt should be the ~22-26 ish range.
Direct jump to 3nt over 2 level preempt, without a dbl, is normally not part of any sort of NT strength ladder; rather it shows less flexibility and strongly wanting to play 3nt vs 4 of a major. It is usually running suit + stoppers, occasionally a strongish unbalanced hand with maybe stiff (honor?) in an unbid major, thinking 3nt likely has play opposite many hands that would pass a simple overcall but strongly not wanting partner to bid 4M with some random 5/6cd major and values especially if opponents raise the preempt.
If you are wanting to utilize it as a ladder bid so you can show 27+ balanced hands, you get to use it a couple times a lifetime and have no good call when you have 8-9 tricks in a minor which will come up a lot more often.
pescetoom writes 'Luckily I only encounter GIB as a partner when some human drops out and thus have relatively little interest in how it bids or plays.In this case my bidding was rudimental (30s tournament and justifiable fears) but I still don't think it merited a jump to 6♠ on that 5 hcp 5-card quacky hand. FWIW, all three who played 3NT did make it all the same, for a top. More worthy of note is that GIB went down 6♠-5 where ♠ makes 9 tricks double dummy and 2 of 3 humans made 10.'
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If you play regularly with GIB, bitter experience teaches you to take TylerE's advice and study its explanations, assiduously. Sometimes it thinks that any sensible action by you shows a mountain and you do best to bite your tongue and go quietly.