At trick 10, GIB underleads its ♥Ace where it can only cost a trick given the King is out - declarer is known to have two trumps and so only room for a singleton heart.
http://tinyurl.com/lhquqpe
Page 1 of 1
Gib Screws up 3-card ending
#2
Posted 2017-May-05, 03:07
xeno123, on 2017-May-04, 10:46, said:
At trick 10, GIB underleads its ♥Ace where it can only cost a trick given the King is out - declarer is known to have two trumps and so only room for a singleton heart.
http://tinyurl.com/lhquqpe
http://tinyurl.com/lhquqpe
From West's perspective, it is crazy unlikely for East to bid 4♣ without the ♥K -- especially given the vulnerability.
So, "knowing" that East has ♥K, the West Robot IMO believes that "all cards are equal" and leads any heart.
#3
Posted 2017-May-05, 03:46
This is a play that can never gain but will often break even, so technically it can still be a result of Monte Carlo simulations. I think it's a bit much to ask for a fix that can distinguish "works on any distribution" from "works on any distribution simulated". Although I would really like more simulations or I would like to know whether GIB sometimes just gives up on simulating, which seems to be the case.
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
George Carlin
George Carlin
#4
Posted 2017-May-05, 09:30
gwnn, on 2017-May-05, 03:46, said:
This is a play that can never gain but will often break even, so technically it can still be a result of Monte Carlo simulations. I think it's a bit much to ask for a fix that can distinguish "works on any distribution" from "works on any distribution simulated". Although I would really like more simulations or I would like to know whether GIB sometimes just gives up on simulating, which seems to be the case.
Yes, I agree that is what happened. I've seen it before, mostly in the context of when a player has "lied" during the bidding.
There is a relatively simple fix - near the end of the hand run a handful of simulations with all inferences from bidding turned off. Or even simpler, if two cards are equivalent, play the higher one!
Page 1 of 1