The robots use Gerber sort of
#22
Posted 2020-October-11, 09:43
This was not as difficult as I thought it would be. You just have to plan your auction with care.
Fortunately, I never was in a situation when I desperately needed to escape to 4♣ from 3NTx.
#23
Posted 2020-October-12, 06:30
bluenikki, on 2020-October-11, 09:43, said:
This was not as difficult as I thought it would be. You just have to plan your auction with care.
Fortunately, I never was in a situation when I desperately needed to escape to 4♣ from 3NTx.
Reminds me of a board when the auction went 3H-(X)-P-(4C) and it was taken as gerber, it eventually ended in 6CX which was not a success. The 4C bidder had xx xxx xxx JTxxx or something.
#24
Posted 2020-October-12, 08:51
manudude03, on 2020-October-09, 03:34, said:
This is precisely the point that most players just do not understand about Gerber over natural NT openings. It was a tool designed for a time when transfers were not the standard and thus closed a particular system hole. With a good modern NT structure there is no necessity for Gerber at all because these hands can be bid in a different way. The OP hand is a case in point - it is a balanced slam-going hand so either start with Stayman or, if you play it, a Baron 2♠ (or 4♠) response.
Finally, for the record I play a 4♣ response to 1NT as showing both majors and after a 2NT opening as showing diamonds. I regard both conventions as a clear improvement over Gerber.
#25
Posted 2020-October-12, 14:40
Zelandakh, on 2020-October-12, 08:51, said:
Finally, for the record I play a 4♣ response to 1NT as showing both majors and after a 2NT opening as showing diamonds. I regard both conventions as a clear improvement over Gerber.
I agree with your argument, although at that point I think one might as well bite the bullet and play South-African Texas transfers over both. Or not?
#26
Posted 2020-October-12, 15:06
Zelandakh, on 2020-October-12, 08:51, said:
Sure, when they come up, they have the potential to be 1000% better than if you were using Gerber instead. But, if you have a strong minor suit hand that just needs the right number of aces to make slam, but otherwise play 4NT, then playing Gerber will make your life a lot easier.
And most players have a way to show both majors below the 4 level.
#28
Posted 2020-October-12, 15:27
johnu, on 2020-October-12, 15:10, said:
That's a big call. Unfortunately I can't seem to get system cards for the most recent world championships, but I looked through the last Australian open trials. Here we see the following agreements for 1NT-4C:
- hearts - 19 pairs
- 6/5 in the majors - 1 pair
- Gerber - 1 pair
- No agreement - 1 pair
There will always be regional trends, but good ideas do filter down here every so often. If Gerber were clearly better I would expect to see a higher prevalence.
#29
Posted 2020-October-12, 16:14
sfi, on 2020-October-12, 15:27, said:
- hearts - 19 pairs
- 6/5 in the majors - 1 pair
- Gerber - 1 pair
- No agreement - 1 pair
There will always be regional trends, but good ideas do filter down here every so often. If Gerber were clearly better I would expect to see a higher prevalence.
I am very surprised that South African Texas Transfers have overwhelming support in Australia. Is weak NT the norm there?
#30
Posted 2020-October-12, 16:31
pescetom, on 2020-October-12, 14:40, said:
I have alternative ways of showing a major one-suiter and asking partner for their slam suitability and ordinary Texas if just a key card ask is required. So I personally see little benefit to the SA variety. Over 2NT it is worse - SA Texas is a great way of wrong-siding a contract and losing the 4♣ transfer means having to find an alternative auction for a diamond one-suiter. That would probably mean for me having to mix it in with 3♠, meaning that Opener would no longer be able to show club support there.
#31
Posted 2020-October-12, 16:54
johnu, on 2020-October-12, 15:06, said:
And most players have a way to show both majors below the 4 level.
As do I. The 4♣ response over 1NT is used on 3 different hand types, weaker distributional hands that want to preempt immediately to the 4 level (I play a WNT opening); hands that are certain that no slam is available no matter how good partner's support; and hands that just want to know the better major and ask for key cards. Normal game forcing hands with 5-5 majors use the auction 1NT - 2♦; 2♥ - 3♦, which gives plenty of space for slam investigation on the hands that need it.
For minor one-suited hands that just want to ask, you set the suit, either directly using 3m or via a transfer, and then use your favourite key card convention, presumably Minorwood, Redwood or Kickback. You get the benefit of key card follow-ups when that is useful. For me the auction will be something like 1NT - 3♣; 3♦ - 4♦ or 1NT - 3♦; 3♥ - 4♥, where Opener's 3♦/3♥ declined the slam try. These auctions are of course extremely rare; usually Responder will want to find out some additional information along the way, which is what the space between 3red and 4red is used for. Over 2NT it is similar: 2NT - 3♠; 3NT - 4♣; 4♦ - 4♥, where 3NT declined a club fit and 4♦ declined the slam try, or 2NT - 4♣; 4♦ - 4♥.
I am sure you will argue that these auctions are such that finishing in 4NT might not be possible. That is true but my bidding philosophy is more to maximise information transfer to make it so that we can find good slams as often as possible rather than catering to special cases. It would in fact not be so difficult to construct auctions to handle this without Gerber, I just do not consider it worth the effort.
#32
Posted 2020-October-12, 16:57
johnu, on 2020-October-12, 16:14, said:
There are quite a few people playing weak NT in general (maybe 20-30%), but I would guess that at least 15 of those pairs play strong NT. I know two of them play Precision, so they would have a weaker NT range.
#33
Posted 2020-October-12, 19:10
#34
Posted 2020-October-12, 19:57
johnu, on 2020-October-12, 16:14, said:
I have mentioned this before. South African Texas transfers only enjoy support in a very small[1] part of Australia. Will Jenner-O'Shea teaches it at the Sydney Bridge Club (Home of the NSWBA). If you go North of the Harbour to the largest club in Australia, where the actual South Africans live, they don't play it. The club where I learned doesn't use it either - they are members of the Gerber-detester fraternity.
I believe that South African is popular in Victoria.
About a year ago I played with a pick-up partner in Sydney Bridge centre who was the playing director and (obviously) much better than me. I had just learned Texas from GIB and when I bid 4♦ over 1NT he thought for quite a while then bid 4♥.
I would place it as an 'intermediate' convention.
One big problem with 'giving' people convention cards is that you assume that they actually know the stuff that's on them. This can lead to all sorts of hilarious 'understandings'.
[1] When I say small I mean in terms of Bridge players, not geography - obviously.
So, no they don't the support is underwhelming, to say the least.
#35
Posted 2020-October-14, 19:25
I just used Gerber with the robots and it was delicious .
https://tinyurl.com/yxb7p2ed
#36
Posted 2020-October-15, 03:22
johnu, on 2020-October-12, 16:14, said:
#37
Posted 2020-October-15, 03:35
nige1, on 2020-October-15, 03:22, said:
What meaning is assigned to 4♥ and 4♠? Letting opener make a "safe" slam try when responder just has a game only hand seems like major information leakage.
#38
Posted 2020-October-15, 04:19
johnu, on 2020-October-15, 03:35, said:
I would expect that everyone around here who is playing 4C and 4D as transfers will also have 4H and 4S to play. Most would not have a meaning for the intervening step, but those who do are likely to play it as a hand with super support, essentially asking responder to reconsider. I recently suggested playing it as a hand with no positional value, just in case partner has some but chose to transfer anyway, but haven't actually done so yet. I'm not sure if you lose too much by letting LHO double for the lead though.