The Law??
#1
Posted 2023-April-23, 14:58
This is the second time in three days I saw GiB supply MI, in the first case a missing explanation when it has an agreement and in this case an illogical and self-serving explanation when it has a different and more logical agreement.
Usually it explains the 3-level raise honestly as "The Law, 3+ cards".
Here it had 2 cards and decided to deviate from agreements ? ( perfectly legal, although opens up many discussions).
But it then explained as "The Law, 2+ cards", which is both illogical and misleading, above all seems based upon the actual hand rather than the agreement.
#2
Posted 2023-April-23, 16:29
pescetom, on 2023-April-23, 14:58, said:
This is the second time in three days I saw GiB supply MI, in the first case a missing explanation when it has an agreement and in this case an illogical and self-serving explanation when it has a different and more logical agreement.
Usually it explains the 3-level raise honestly as "The Law, 3+ cards".
Here it had 2 cards and decided to deviate from agreements ? ( perfectly legal, although opens up many discussions).
But it then explained as "The Law, 2+ cards", which is both illogical and misleading, above all seems based upon the actual hand rather than the agreement.
#3
Posted 2023-April-23, 17:51
pescetom, on 2023-April-23, 14:58, said:
"The Law" says that if there are 16 total trumps, you should bid 3 over 2 but not 3 over 3. So if E-W have 8 spades then "The Law" indicates a 3-heart call. Is this good bridge? You can read the various books and make of it what you will.
#4
Posted 2023-April-23, 19:47
sfi, on 2023-April-23, 17:51, said:
I haven't seen it put that way before; most statements of The Law say that you should bid 3 over 2 only with 17 trumps, as then if they have 8 we have 9.
I guess your version would take vulnerability into account, but GIB doesn't; it uses the simpler interpretation anyway, so pescetom is right that its understanding of The Law shows 3 trumps here.
But the explanation is the same as the other thread; GIB has no way of saying 'or'.
It has a default rule that in any auction, if it knows the partnership holds 21-24 combined points, it can make a non-jump bid at the 3 level if that shows a previously undisclosed 8 card fit.
It has a second rule that after opening a weak 2, a 3 level raise can be used on any hand with 3 trumps that doesn't have enough values for game opposite a minimum, and must be alerted with 'The Law'.
3♥ thus combines the two rules, and means something like {"I have 14-17 points, 2+ hearts" or "I have 4-17 points and 3 hearts, alert The Law!"}. The point ranges, trump length ranges, and alerts are merged for the two rules via least common denominators into a single description that removes the word 'or'.
It's not deviating from any agreement or changing the description based on its hand; it's just not disclosing its entire logic which wouldn't come close to fitting in the description box (it also involves a lot of rules that eliminate other bids first; the above is a simplified version).
#5
Posted 2023-April-23, 20:13
#6
Posted 2023-April-23, 23:29
smerriman, on 2023-April-23, 19:47, said:
That's not quite what Cohen wrote (maybe he elaborated on it in later books). The way he phrased it in his first book is:
Quote
Try not to let the opponents play at a level equal to their number of trumps. (Chapter 5)
(Box and bold in original text)
In summary, he says you should bid 3 over 2 but not 3 over 3 with 16 total trumps. He has tables and everything to back up his thesis, but you're right that his approach doesn't quite work when you're vulnerable and they're trigger-happy.
As for what the robots are doing, you're much better placed to answer that. But according to the description, it kind of looks like they were following Cohen's guidelines for once.
#7
Posted 2023-April-24, 00:30
That's probably why it's more commonly described as bidding to the level of the number of trumps you have, and needing 3 card support to raise to 3.
Will have to look at the book but it would surprise me a lot if he suggests raising 2♥ to 3♥ in this situation just because you hold 2 card support and the opponents might have a fit. With this hand GIB is bidding it based on HCP instead.
#8
Posted 2023-April-24, 01:39
To the best of my knowledge the statement of the LAW is that the total number of tricks (defined as the number of tricks NS can make in their optimal trump suit plus the number EW can take in their optimal trump suit - neither of which need be the longest trump suit) is (often) equal to the number of trumps (longest trump suit of NS + longest trump suit of EW). All rules on bidding X over Y, or bidding to level Z, are derived from this in combination with bridge score tables and some statistics, along with adjustments to make the law more accurate.
#9
Posted 2023-April-24, 04:39
As North I would estimate total trumps to be ~ 16 on this deal.
#10
Posted 2023-April-24, 05:09
How about the Possibility of Total Tricks?
#11
Posted 2023-April-24, 05:23
smerriman, on 2023-April-24, 00:30, said:
That's definitely a catch here, but only a moderate one if you assume that opener will never hold four spades. I was assuming that the robot did make that assumption and then simulated enough hands to decide that it was likely they were in an 8-card fit.
Of course, the law itself is poor enough that you really don't want to be making additional assumptions and then relying on the outcome. In short - I agree that it's not a good "law-based" decision, but it at least made sense to me that the robot was mostly applying it.
#12
Posted 2023-April-24, 06:40
What worries me here however is not so much the technical bidding choice or the logic behind it, but the misinformation about actual agreements. If GiB has decided ("agreed") that we bid 3 on either strong 8 card fit or any 9 card fit then it should describe the agreement to opponents this way: "The Law", which is jargon for only the second possible explanation of the call, is inappropriate.
The legal problem of course is that the robot will not explain better the next time even if caught and punished. This is arguably closer to a concealed partnership understanding than an accidental poor explanation.
#13
Posted 2023-April-24, 14:24
It passes the "Law" with an 8 card fit.
You have 6, it has 2.
Ergo hic hoc.