svengolly Posted February 25, 2018 Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 Why oh why would GIB do this? My RDBL shows a spade fit, I hadn't promised any extra clubs. GIB pard only has 7 points. There's no slam try here. I'm fine in 4S (which makes). In fact, GIB weirdness was all over tonight when I played in ACBL practice tourney #4. Several overbids by GIB even with minimum responses from me getting us one level too high. 5C Bid over 4S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
smerriman Posted February 25, 2018 Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 Redouble shows exactly 3 spades. Opponents showed 10 diamonds, so GIB knows you have at most a singleton. That leaves 9 cards in clubs and hearts, so you must have at least 5 clubs. You're going to be hard pressed to get GIB to prefer a Moysian spade fit over a 9 card club fit. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
svengolly Posted February 25, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 Hmm, I've always played a RDBL in that sequence as general fit showing, not exactly 3 card support. But why would GIB pull at the 5 level with such a weak hand after I've voluntarily bid 4S? That seems a bit much even for GIB. So what's a better bid on my part to avoid this? FWIW, GIB really messes with my head a LOT. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
smerriman Posted February 25, 2018 Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 GIB plays support doubles, so double (or redouble in this case) is to show precisely 3 card support - you use spade raises to guarantee 4. So I can't see how GIB has any choice but to pull to 5♣ - you showed strength for game, and a 9+ card fit surely has to be better than a 7 (and guaranteed not 8) card one. GIB knows you bid game without knowing about his 4 clubs after all! GIB would bid 3♠ (4+ ♠, 16-18 total points), but you also have 4♠ (4+ ♠, 19-22 points) or 3♦ (4+ ♠, 1- ♦, 19-22) points to choose from if you want to force to game. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
manudude03 Posted February 25, 2018 Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 Smerriman has explained it quite simply. When you play with GIB, you are playing its system, not your own. It's not making a slam try, it is just putting the contract where the fit is known instead of it's known 4-3 fit (if you hadn't misled it) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve2005 Posted February 25, 2018 Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 Gib knows there is a club fit and thinks spades is 4-3 anyone who bid 5C Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pescetom Posted February 25, 2018 Report Share Posted February 25, 2018 Hmm, I've always played a RDBL in that sequence as general fit showing, not exactly 3 card support. For the record, what was the purpose of showing general fit rather than just bidding to game over a passed hand with fit?I'm not sure how GIB works, but your bidding probably messed with his head a LOT ;) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
svengolly Posted February 26, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 26, 2018 For the record, what was the purpose of showing general fit rather than just bidding to game over a passed hand with fit?I'm not sure how GIB works, but your bidding probably messed with his head a LOT ;) OY, everyone's a critic. :P I asked in one post what my specific correct bid should have been to make GIB happy. No response. What's forcing in that sequence? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
svengolly Posted February 26, 2018 Author Report Share Posted February 26, 2018 GIB would bid 3♠ (4+ ♠, 16-18 total points), but you also have 4♠ (4+ ♠, 19-22 points) or 3♦ (4+ ♠, 1- ♦, 19-22) points to choose from if you want to force to game.OK thanks! With my regular partners, they'd leave me in 4S. So after 1S - X - 3S forces? Jump to 4S is a signoff and there might be more there (which as the auction went, I had to anyway). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
smerriman Posted February 26, 2018 Report Share Posted February 26, 2018 All of your spade raises work exactly the same as if RHO didn't double - 2♠ is minimum, 3♠ is invitational, 4♠ is max. Your partner just has the additional information that you're not raising with a shapely 3 card support hand, which (without the interference) you would otherwise sometimes have to do. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.