johnu, on 2017-February-24, 11:25, said:
It's hard to believe that a double of 2♦ would be anything other than a penalty double, but who knows with GIB. Takeout to hearts since opponents have bid clubs and diamonds and opener had a chance to show hearts but didn't?
I really wanted to know that now, and checked. In addition to what the first double shows, in round 3 East can bid:
X: 2+
♦ → so it's a penalty double indeed, good;
pass: 3+
♦; no suitable bid;
2
♥: 4+
♥;
2
♠: 1
♠;
none of them promising additional strength. I have not found a bid for a 0-3-1-9 distribution but that doesn't matter because South promised rebiddable
♣. (All bids of
♣ at any level imply a
♠ "fit".)
Anyway, the "3+
♦" in the 4
♥ label is indeed from the pass in the previous round. Why it's there will probably remain a mystery.* Strictly speaking - as an interesting side point - pass in round 3 should logically never happen because all hands that qualify for a pass also qualify for a double, so the "no suitable bid" part is an impossibility.
*EDIT: Okay, let me try some conspiration theory assuming (I have wondered before if this is true but I am not sure at all) that whenever GIB has two similar bids available, it will choose the one that is more restrictive in order to describe the hand more precisely. I will also assume that originally the pass did not promise diamonds and I also restrict myself to those hands that do not qualify for a call of 2
♥ or 2
♠. The remaining hands always contain several
♦ cards with some rare exceptions containing tons of
♣. With these hands GIB would then always double. But someone might have complained that doubling
♦ at the 2 level is not always a good idea, and someone else may have wondered how to make GIB pass - and found out that the way to make GIB pass is to make the pass call more restrictive than the double by demanding that pass contain 3+
♦ - and there we are. This work-around had the desirable effect of making GIB pass instead of double through the paradoxical situation that a pass requires more cards in opponents' suit than a penalty double. GIB would still double with exactly 2 cards in
♦ but that's irrelevant because it almost never happens.
Will try to check the latter, but not today. Stay tuned!