Posted 2006-October-09, 16:21
Haha.
I used to play TT. At the crucial age (early teens for most sports), my country decided the most economical way to improve country's standing fast was to:
1) Seek out foreign players who are already good and get them to represent our country.
2) Focus exclusively on getting kids who are 6-9 years old interested in the game, and giving them every opportunity to improve.
So my peers and I grew up watching the previous batch of players jet setting around the world and having fun at tourneys (which is all I cared about =D ), and thought it'd be our turn soon. But suddenly the focus shifted and the little kids got to go everywhere and travel free and get frequent flier miles free and get little goodie bags free, and it still wasn't our turn yet. (And never will be).
I was obviously upset, hurt, bitter, whatever. But the strategy paid off. Singapore TT improved by leaps and bounds...mostly due to foreigners of course, but local standard also improved tremendously. As a result, there was a lot more interest paid to the game. Young, telegenic sports stars help to raise profile *a lot*. There are now previously unimaginable sponserships, marketing income for the game, etc. All because of the relatively harsh decision taken 10 years ago.
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If anything, I think bridge is suffering unnecessarily because nobody wants to take this harsh decision to promote the game actively. Mostly because the people who are in position to do so have little to gain and much to lose from this.
It'd take either an altrustic and *rich* *influential* bridger, or a *very rich* *very influential* profit seeking outsider daring to brave the often officious higher ranks of bridge, to promote and popularise bridge the way i want it to be. The way it deserves to be. Because bridge is worth it! Haha
Possibly every bridger older than say, 25, would be affected negatively in some ways.
Possibly the best looking young bridge players would be promoted and touted as superstars, and everyone else can only glare enviously and read about their megamillion contracts.
Possibly versions of bridge where youth-bestowed physical prowess is an advantage would be promoted. (Because they can be more exciting, thrilling, more palatable to audiences)
Possibly the overall standard of the game will be raised, there'll be lots more players, there will be increased prize money for less cost, it'll be easier to find bridge player friends and talk bridge all day (or a lover!, no more sneaking away to play bridge, your wife approves because she's a fellow bridger!). The intellectual stimulation as multitudes focuses on solving bridge problems will lead to increases in IQ, leading subsequently to breakthroughs like world peace and cures for all sorts of illnesses and the colonisation of Mars.
All because of Bridge.
So in summary, some pain is needed and indeed, should be welcomed, if it leads to all those desirable effects.
"More and more these days I find myself pondering how to reconcile my net income with my gross habits."
John Nelson.