GIB seeming tries to run from a fit that should've been known?
#1
Posted 2012-May-10, 01:36
I don't see why it'd bid 3♦. The bid says 1-♥ so if I did only have 6♥ and at least 3♦ I probably would have left it there. I had already shown 6♥ and it has 2♥ so why didn't it just bid hearts?
#2
Posted 2012-May-10, 09:10
#3
Posted 2012-May-10, 13:01
North didn't bid 1NT on the first round because it didn't have opener's clubs stopped.
Opener's 1NT rebid doesn't care about stoppers in the overcall suit. I guess whoever wrote that rule believed in "stoppers are for wimps". Maybe at the 1 level it's not so important when your side has about half the points or more.
#4
Posted 2012-May-10, 14:44
#5
Posted 2012-May-10, 17:25
barmar, on 2012-May-10, 13:01, said:
Opener's 1NT rebid doesn't care about stoppers in the overcall suit. I guess whoever wrote that rule believed in "stoppers are for wimps". Maybe at the 1 level it's not so important when your side has about half the points or more.
I guess the same programmer didn't write these two provisions :-)
I would like to suggest that following (1X)-1Y-(1Z) it is standard for a 1NT bid to show a stopper in Z, but not necessarily in the minor suit X, and that GIB should adopt this approach. I also think rebidding 1NT without opp's stop is silly when you have a perfectly rebiddable suit.
#7
Posted 2012-May-11, 12:40
Stephen Tu, on 2012-May-10, 14:44, said:
The problem is that 3♥ isn't encouraging enough: it shows 3-8 points, and North is too strong for that. So it bids a new suit to show a better hand.
#9
Posted 2012-May-11, 13:18
- decrease upper limit for south's 2h (17 total points? 18?)
- have north raise to 3h directly over 2h, why passing here, if think too strong for 3h later? I'd be OK with north raising to 3h on this hand. If it wants to go low that's fine too, but once you go low there can't be game try later, it has to stick with it.
- 3d still has to be defined as 6+ diamonds. Then South passes this, then North realizes that risk of being in a stupid contract is worse than being slightly underbid and chooses 3h.
Don't know why 3d considered better hand than 3h anyway. That's just because poor definition of 3d, probably because not defined and falling back to some default rule.
#12
Posted 2012-May-11, 13:44
Bbradley62, on 2012-May-11, 13:31, said:
True. The tool I use warns that the meaning contradicts something that has been shown earlier.
There are lots of rules like this. They exist to explain human bids, or to allow for simulations to find bids. You can't expect total consistency across all the rules if you also want the flexibility to apply judgement.
#13
Posted 2012-May-11, 14:08
With 2h you are often stuck.
But the main thing I think is we want 3d better defined so GIB doesn't pull weird stuff out of its virtual posterior, and bids 3h as a mild underbid instead. Now on this particular auction having passed first, one could argue that 6d is impossible since one could open weak 2, bid 2d over 1s, etc., and that 3d should be a good raise to 3h, but I don't think we should make GIB so fancy .
#14
Posted 2012-May-11, 15:13
Since it's so unlikely that North would pass three times holding six diamonds and then bid 3♦ at his fourth chance, it seems reasonable to say that this 3♦ bid shows 5+D. If the rule were written to say it requires 6D, the bid would never be made.
Edit: But, hands with 5D and 11 total points would likely bid 2♦ directly over 1♠. Hmmm....
This post has been edited by Bbradley62: 2012-May-11, 15:16
#15
Posted 2012-May-11, 16:16
Bbradley62, on 2012-May-11, 15:13, said:
I'm perfectly OK with defining the bid so that it's never made by GIB, but defining it catering to weird people who do pass several times, so that GIB can field it later even though it contradicts previous passes.
I've certainly never passed twice then come back in with 3d on this type auction. In general groping with new suits when partner has already shown 6+ ought to show 6+ also.
Does GIB play snapdragon?