I am pretty confident that GIB is *not* randomly throwing cards, although this is often quoted as the reason for its not playing lowest. I base this on my observation that GIB plays its lowest card with a frequency which (I believe) is much less than would be consistent with random policy. I have not kept empirical records to support this observation, so feel free to opine otherwise.
If my suspicion is correct, and without doing the work I accept that there has to be an element of doubt about that, then it is not hard to understand the mentality behind the programmers' policy. Intermediate players and below, as well as a sizeable proportion of "advanced" players, are used to (human) defenders playing lowest. If declarer assumes that GIB is following the habitual trend of their usual human opponents then GIB will gain from the exchange by departing from expectation (possibly enhanced by declarer occasionally losing track of the spot cards).
Unfortunately, such a policy would be a losing strategy against good opponents who rumble the policy and do not lose track of the spots. Indeed as a policy it would be just as bad as always playing the lowest card, even if it never threw an active card inadvertently when pitching high.
So it may well be that always playing lowest would be an improvement on current policy of never playing lowest (if that is indeed the current policy, as I observe). Because that way it would never accidentally pitch an active card.
It would however only represent a marginal improvement, the margin being those hands where it is tempted to pitch an active card, which is not that frequent. The frequency of pitching active high cards appears to be higher than reality, simply because they invite being posted in the forums, where routine good plays do not get the same publicity.
Furthermore, it would lose its current edge over the beginner/intermediate player who currently assumes that GIB is playing lowest.
A routine bread and butter hand. You cash the AK, to which all follow, East with the Ten on the second round.
If GIB were programmed always to play the lowest card when not trying to win, and there were no other indicators from the bidding or play, you might be tempted to play for the drop, and you would be right to do so fractionally better than half the time.
If East instead were to follow with the Jack, you would know to finesse, with 100% success rate. You would probably finesse anyway in real life, but without that level of confidence. Indeed the reduced confidence in real life may indicate a completely different line of play.
This effect would totally distort the playing odds so as to change the nature of the game utterly.
The above hand is no contrived construction, but is the sort of decision that you are faced with time and again, much more frequently than the occasional pitch of a significant card that is GIB's current foible.
Under GIB's current (my suggested) policy of never playing lowest, you would finesse if the Ten appeared, and play for the drop if the Jack appeared, for which your long term success rate would be the same as if it always played lowest. But a defensive strategy of truly playing at random would improve its long term success in defence compared with either of those alternatives.
Let me finish by asking this: If GIB were to change its strategy to that of always playing lowest spot card, how many posts to the forum would you expect to see of hands like the heart suit in this thread when declarer successfully plays for the drop when the real life odds favour finessing? I suggest that the posts would be less frequent than the occurrence at the table.
Psych (pron. saik): A gross and deliberate misstatement of honour strength and/or suit length. Expressly permitted under Law 73E but forbidden contrary to that law by Acol club tourneys.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. m
s
t
r-m
nd
ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
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