Generosity of BBO Bot Claims
#1
Posted 2021-April-23, 05:36
#3
Posted 2021-April-23, 07:33
fuzzyquack, on 2021-April-23, 05:36, said:
#4
Posted 2021-April-23, 10:21
#5
Posted 2021-April-23, 14:42
Is this true?
In every jurisdiction?
Yes, GIB is sometimes kind. Sometimes it isn't.
It will sometimes deny an invalid claim and then continue to play so badly that you make the contract anyway.
Swings and roundabouts.
#6
Posted 2021-April-23, 15:26
In general, it depends on the game. In a tournament, the Duplicate Laws apply, which include:
- 68C:A claim should be accompanied at once by a clear statement of [the claim];
- 70A:[T]he Director adjudicates the result of the board as equitably as possible to both sides, but any doubtful point ... shall be resolved against the claimer.
- 70E1:The Director shall not accept from claimer any unstated line of play [which relies on a card being in one or the other hand] unless an opponent failed to follow suit [], or would subsequently fail to follow suit on a normal* line of play.
In a BBO tournament, the claim statement tends to be handwaved a bit (but in ACBL RegionalsAtHome, nope, LB claim law applies).
But also note that if you want to insist on all of the above, you MUST have the director adjudicate. Because if you just reject the claim and let declarer play on,
- 68D2b:...play may continue, [and] (ii): the prior claim or concession is void and not subject to adjudication. Laws 16 and 50 do not apply, and the score subsequently obtained shall stand.
In rubber, claims are adjudicated by the Arbiter, if present; in a game without arbiter, the Laws are just different enough from above to be interesting (including if there's a trump outstanding unmentioned, defenders can require or forbid declarer pulling the trump).
#7
Posted 2021-April-23, 16:00
nige1, on 2021-April-23, 07:33, said:
GIB only accepts claims where there is a 100% line based on what is known thus far. So if a claim relies on a successful finesse, it will only accept it if the other hand has already shown out in the suit. If GIB accepts a claim you think needs an unproven finesse, you have missed a better line.
You are right that it should be more discriminating. If you're unsure whether a suit is good (maybe you missed a pitch), it's often simple enough to claim assuming it is. If the claim is rejected, you have more information about the hand. I'm not sure how you cater for that, particularly when the vast majority of play against robots is casual and you don't want to draw out the game unnecessarily.
#8
Posted 2021-April-23, 18:48
mycroft, on 2021-April-23, 15:26, said:
In general, it depends on the game. In a tournament, the Duplicate Laws apply, which include:
- 68C:A claim should be accompanied at once by a clear statement of [the claim];
- 70A:[T]he Director adjudicates the result of the board as equitably as possible to both sides, but any doubtful point ... shall be resolved against the claimer.
- 70E1:The Director shall not accept from claimer any unstated line of play [which relies on a card being in one or the other hand] unless an opponent failed to follow suit [], or would subsequently fail to follow suit on a normal* line of play.
In a BBO tournament, the claim statement tends to be handwaved a bit (but in ACBL RegionalsAtHome, nope, LB claim law applies).
But also note that if you want to insist on all of the above, you MUST have the director adjudicate. Because if you just reject the claim and let declarer play on,
- 68D2b:...play may continue, [and] (ii): the prior claim or concession is void and not subject to adjudication. Laws 16 and 50 do not apply, and the score subsequently obtained shall stand.
In rubber, claims are adjudicated by the Arbiter, if present; in a game without arbiter, the Laws are just different enough from above to be interesting (including if there's a trump outstanding unmentioned, defenders can require or forbid declarer pulling the trump).
OK - so if the defenders (usually) continue to play then they have no recourse.
Thanks.
#9
Posted 2021-April-23, 18:54
sfi, on 2021-April-23, 16:00, said:
You are right that it should be more discriminating. If you're unsure whether a suit is good (maybe you missed a pitch), it's often simple enough to claim assuming it is. If the claim is rejected, you have more information about the hand. I'm not sure how you cater for that, particularly when the vast majority of play against robots is casual and you don't want to draw out the game unnecessarily.
I suspect - with no evidence - that the vast majority of play against robots is Human V. 3 other robots.
OP is someone with considerable success in that format. (https://www.bridgeba...hp?u=fuzzyquack).
OP's comments about robots tournaments are completely correct.
But, every player is dealing with the same advantage/disadvantage.
I don't think fuzzyquack is talking about robot V. 2+ human games
#10
Posted 2021-April-24, 05:52
#11
Posted 2021-April-24, 10:35
helene_t, on 2021-April-24, 05:52, said:
Or replace them with something more practical: see my proposal for a playout button in this related thread and others previously.