Bad Grand Slam Quant
#1
Posted 2011-November-05, 14:59
5NT is explained as having 15-17, but the robot has 12. I suppose if robot has 17 and I open 2C, maybe it should just go to grand, but still.
#2
Posted 2011-November-05, 20:41
Look at the range it shows for your 3NT: 19-22. 19+17 is only 36, not enough to jump to grand. If you have a hand that was planning on bidding 2♣-2♦-2NT (22-24), you're supposed to rebid 4NT in this auction, and then it will go to 7 with 17. If you had bid that way with this hand, it would have just jumped to 6NT.
#4
Posted 2011-November-05, 22:07
I think the auction in the OP could never have happened if the bot were sitting South, but it needs a meaning in case a human bids it. And since the bid to invite slam is 4NT, 3NT has to be weaker than that.
#5
Posted 2011-November-05, 23:15
#6
Posted 2011-November-06, 08:19
barmar, on 2011-November-05, 22:07, said:
#7
Posted 2011-November-07, 00:16
#8
Posted 2011-November-07, 08:48
Let's try to bring this back to the original question. South chose to treat this hand as balanced 22HCP, which seems completely reasonable to me. Let us suppose that he instead held ♠A9, ♥AJ63, ♦A75, ♣AKQ9.
The auction begins 2♣-2N-3N... If GIB doesn't want South to rebid 3N with this hand, the given explanation shouldn't encompass it. North continues with 5NT, which instructs South to bid 7N with the top end of his previously-stated 19-22 range. So, the question is still:
Why does North think that his balanced 12HCP belongs in 7N opposite a balanced 22HCP?
Earlier, the response was
barmar, on 2011-November-05, 20:41, said:
Did North really simulate that "most" or "many" balanced 22counts will made grand opposite his hand?
#9
Posted 2011-November-07, 10:11
Bbradley62, on 2011-November-07, 08:48, said:
The difference seems to be that 4NT is well defined, but 3NT is a default.
Quote
Let's try to bring this back to the original question. South chose to treat this hand as balanced 22HCP, which seems completely reasonable to me. Let us suppose that he instead held ♠A9, ♥AJ63, ♦A75, ♣AKQ9.
The auction begins 2♣-2N-3N... If GIB doesn't want South to rebid 3N with this hand, the given explanation shouldn't encompass it. North continues with 5NT, which instructs South to bid 7N with the top end of his previously-stated 19-22 range. So, the question is still:
Why does North think that his balanced 12HCP belongs in 7N opposite a balanced 22HCP?
Earlier, the response was
Did North really simulate that "most" or "many" balanced 22counts will made grand opposite his hand?
What seems to be happening is that lots of the maximum North hands in the simulation have a 5-card spade, heart, or diamond suit that fits well with South's, resulting in many hands where grand is either cold or at worst on a finesse or squeeze. There are also a bunch of 5-5 hands.
You might argue "but those hands aren't consistent with the bidding, they're supposed to bid their suit." But if GIB only looks for hands where IT would bid 3NT, it won't find any -- with a 2♣ opener it would either bid a 5-card suit or 4NT to invite to 6NT.
#10
Posted 2011-November-07, 10:16
#11
Posted 2011-November-07, 10:50
I suppose there's one thing we could do: change the system. Why use 4NT as the invitation instead of 3NT, when 3NT is an idle bid? I'll discuss this with Uday and Georgi.
#13
Posted 2011-November-08, 12:09
#14
Posted 2011-November-08, 12:50
#16
Posted 2015-July-18, 07:50
#17
Posted 2015-July-18, 14:41
#18
Posted 2015-July-19, 01:06
Bbradley62, on 2015-July-18, 14:41, said:
Yes, it is so. But while i was searching for another aim i have found this thread and i wonder myself that anyone had seen and said what i have told as general information.(Lovera)
#19
Posted 2015-July-19, 16:28
barmar, on 2011-November-05, 20:41, said:
Look at the range it shows for your 3NT: 19-22. 19+17 is only 36, not enough to jump to grand. If you have a hand that was planning on bidding 2♣-2♦-2NT (22-24), you're supposed to rebid 4NT in this auction, and then it will go to 7 with 17. If you had bid that way with this hand, it would have just jumped to 6NT.
Could you explain further? It seems very counter-intuitive to have to jump to 4NT to show a minimum balanced hand, having opened 2C. Also, if you had an unbalanced hand, why would you not just bid a suit over 2NT? Given GIB's parameters, please provide an example hand that would raise 2NT to 3NT. Or, as I suspect such a hand is not likely, consider changing the programming so that raising 2NT to 3NT shows 22-24 or perhaps 22-23 or even exactly 22.
I now see that this has been discussed and is under consideration. Thank you. But I can't help but wonder why any experienced bridge player would design a system where 2C-2N-3N is an idle bid! Perhaps it has something to do with that fact that the use of a direct 2NT response to 2C as a natural call is no longer common practice in North America.
This post has been edited by iandayre: 2015-July-19, 16:48