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This was a bad slam that got worse when the defense cashed the first two clubs.

 

Who is to blame here? North was a JPB robot.

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North has no business going to 6S when he knows you're off two cashing clubs.

And how on earth does he (it) know that?

 

Anyway, the fact that responders to this thread aren't even bothering to read the alerts because mixed cuebids are so standard nowadays should tell the OP everything he needs to know.

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And how on earth does he (it) know that?

 

Anyway, the fact that responders to this thread aren't even bothering to read the alerts because mixed cuebids are so standard nowadays should tell the OP everything he needs to know.

In that style, North should bid 5 to deny a club control and then South can't go on without one either.

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In that style, North should bid 5 to deny a club control and then South can't go on without one either.

Agree. North cannot bid the slam without a club control.

 

This is why the 2NT opening bid is sometimes referred to as a "slam-killer." It takes up so much space that there is no room for intelligent slam exploration once a fit is found. Still, if the partnership were using control cue bids rather than ace first cue bids, it would be easy to avoid slam.

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It's been a while since I played 1st round controls, but I seem to remember that playing that scheme South should bid 4NT showing the trump ace. It might have gone

 

2NT 3

3 3

3 4

4NT 5 (no 2nd round club control)

5 (ze end)

 

There's a reason why 1/2nd round controls + RKCB got more popular. Under this, North would bid 4 and South knows immediately of the club "hole".

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It's been a while since I played 1st round controls, but I seem to remember that playing that scheme South should bid 4NT showing the trump ace. It might have gone

 

2NT 3

3 3

3 4

4NT 5 (no 2nd round club control)

5 (ze end)

 

There's a reason why 1/2nd round controls + RKCB got more popular. Under this, North would bid 4 and South knows immediately of the club "hole".

The trump cue bid is definitely an optional component. Very few players use trump cue bids to the best of my knowledge. I did with one partner many years ago.

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South is probably to blame for going past 4. He knows North doesn't have the A and the lead is coming through dummy so unless it has KQ you're in trouble straight away. North probably has a stiff diamond on this auction, in which case it might well be light on points. You don't necessarily have 5-level safety either (change Q to Q for example).
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100% system.

Gib cuebids Aces first. In a situation like this where one hand is so much weaker than the other having the ability to cue A/K's really shows it's superiority. Plus it is well known Gib doesn't take the right inferences from cuebidding so it's close to being pointless to try.

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In that style, North should bid 5 to deny a club control and then South can't go on without one either.
Then the Robot is to blame :)
It's been a while since I played 1st round controls, but I seem to remember that playing that scheme South should bid 4NT showing the trump ace. It might have gone

2NT 3

3 3

3 4

4NT 5 (no 2nd round club control)

5 (ze end)

There's a reason why 1/2nd round controls + RKCB got more popular. Under this, North would bid 4 and South knows immediately of the club "hole".

Then mr1303 is to blame :) If you are playing 1st round control cue-bids, then whereagles' rolling 4N approach seems preferable to gordontd's. I doubt the Robot knows either method.
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This was a bad slam that got worse when the defense cashed the first two clubs.

 

Who is to blame here? North was a JPB robot.

GIB has done a lot worse to me! :P I played seven spades yesterday on a 5-1 spade suit.

 

I think the best action for South would be 4NT, which GIB will hopefully interpret as Blackwood. The interface will tell you (with about 80% accuracy) how GIB will read a bid. And actually, I would myself treat it as Blackwood, since spades has been settled, but opinions on that might vary.

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Didn't GIB use to play natural slam tries in such auctions after 3, and then later one of the "improvements" changed it to cuebids?

Yes, then they added GIB subs to their new instant tournaments or whatever, and at first people couldn't see what their bids meant (and later when they did they never bothered looking), so instead of fixing that they just jerry-rigged GIB's system to be something they thought people would understand.

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Why play w/ Bots EVER!! This is a prime example proving that you cannot program advanced actions.

 

This is a great question which deserves its own topic. I am a Gold LM and played my last hand of live bridge in February of 2008. I didn't touch a card until Dec. 2013 when I tried playing the ACBL robot tournaments on BBO. Now I am playing the game regularly again, reading old Bridge World copies and have renewed my ACBL membership.

 

I could go on for quite some time. Rest assured though, despite the robots' flaws, it is an enjoyable form of the game to play. But only play with the Advanced bots, the basic ones ARE truly hopeless.

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