broze, on 2017-May-17, 12:36, said:
The score was 10.5 - 5.5.
And, yes, there were a lot of tough hands. There were a lot of guesses to make in the final set and you got them all right. Or almost all right. One hand you actually got it wrong but the robot defenders let you off the hook. You were in 4
♠ with a trump suit of QJ9 facing Kxxxx. After winning the opening lead in dummy you chose to lead the SQ which lost to RHO's singleton Ace. If RHO had returned a diamond instead of a club, you would have had 4 losers (unless you decided to play LHO for all of the rest of the spades). RHO's play wasn't necessarily wrong, but it was wrong on the lie of the cards.
On the other hand, I could not make a winning guess to save my life. One hand I bid a slam which needed to bring in ATxxx opposite K9xx for no losers. I played the K and it went low, low, Q. So I took the restricted choice finesse and lost to the QJ doubleton. You were in game and you played the A first, so you could not get it wrong.
Another hand I "guessed" to open a 14 point 1NT. This got me to 3
♦ with a trump suit of KT9xx opposite J8x. I lost the finesse to a singleton Q and the other hand got a ruff and his trump A, leading to -200 against the -170 at your table.
That was 3 boards. If they had gone the other way the score would have been 8.5-7.5 in my favor. I only needed 7.5 to win the match, so 2 out of 3 would have been enough.
There were other hands. On one, we held Txxx K9xxx x Jxx. After passing in first seat, it went (1
♦) - x - (P). Both of us bid 1
♥. Partner cue bid 2
♦, showing 18+ HCP. You chose to bid 2
♥ and when your partner cue bid again (showing the same 18+ HCP) you bid 3
♠ which your partner passed. I bid 2
♠ over the first cue bid which my partner raised to 3
♠, allegedly showing 22-24 HCP. Naturally, I bid game. Just as naturally, my partner did not have the 22-24 HCP his bidding promised, and game was a longshot at best. 8 tricks turned out to be the limit.
The bottom line is you have to get some luck to win in these robot games. Sometimes you just don't.