In a daily tournament, I was 3rd hand and the bidding went 3♠(4♣)4♠(X);p(p). I had a decent hand and thought we would make it so I decided to redouble. GIB inexplicably pulled the redouble to 5♣. The explanation is that the bid shows a first round control (it happened to be a void). This is a terrible bid. There is only one scenario where playing a redoubled contract is worse than bidding on - 7♠ vs. 4♠XX nonvulnerable. As if +1480 vs. +1510 makes much difference in any form of scoring! Of course the hand only makes 4♠ so this was about an 18 IMP swing. Ouch.
GIB should never pull a redouble that shows values.
Page 1 of 1
Pulling a Redouble?
#2
Posted 2016-October-28, 07:10
I've looked at all of the pinned posts and can't work out how to create a simple diagram so here is the link to the hand as played.
{comments}
#3
Posted 2016-October-28, 11:18
Obviously not something the most novice human would ever do. Part of the problem is defining the XX by point count. Of course it means I think we will make! But it is still hard to imagine why GIB does anything but pass.
#4
Posted 2016-October-30, 08:34
iandayre, on 2016-October-28, 11:18, said:
Obviously not something the most novice human would ever do. Part of the problem is defining the XX by point count. Of course it means I think we will make! But it is still hard to imagine why GIB does anything but pass.
Good reply.
I think all the main problems are defining the xx by TPs count. This meant it was xx TP count explanation caused the disaster.
Now I would take this issue to enlarge its ranges.
Hand-1 Here is Slar's hand.
Hand-2 Here is a normal Gibs sequences.
Hand-3 Here is my hand to enlarge this issue.
Obviously, if without worse x/xx TP count explanations, there are not such rediculous stories.
Page 1 of 1