Posted 2007-June-29, 10:45
1) I think that one of the biggest "beginners" mistakes is not to play up at least some of the time. Playing against weaker opposition all the time teaches you things that work against them, but that get you slaughtered against good players. Don't do it all the time, because it's disheartening, but a couple of "you stepped out too far, here's sticks and wheels to prove it" every once in a while teaches them first that those kinds of calls are dangerous (even though they steal the beginner game blind), and second, to see when their opponents do it so they get +800s of their own.
Too many people are good I/N players, but stay there too long; they then find the jump to the open game (and the result average drop from 62% to 42%) too much to handle, so they quit.
And this doesn't only apply to beginners; I know of players with 1400 MP who won't play in smaller regionals because they would have to play in A...
2) This one kills beginners: they listen to too many people. Bridge is the epitome of the Perl Principle, and There's *always* More Than One Way To Do It. But they get this from player A, and that from player B, and the other from player C, and suddenly their bidding system is a hodgepodge of random conventions that don't work together even if they could remember it all, and they don't really understand *why* they're playing it, so they don't use the information they get anyway.
3) "Don't do anything for no reason." If you have a reason for your play, even if it's wrong, you can learn. If you don't know why you did it, nothing can help you.
Corollary: Unless it's from your teacher, or your regular partner in private, after the game, the answer to "Why did you..." or "Why didn't you..." is "because I'm an idiot." It's what your partner wants to hear, and he won't quit asking questions until he gets it from you, so tell him that right off the top. If you really weren't thinking, that's bad - don't do it again. Otherwise, the unspoken half of the response is "...for agreeing to play with you."
Corollary #2: Don't ask "Why did you..." or "Why didn't you..." questions (except with your regular partner, after the game, in private). The question you're really asking is "I'm smarter than you are. Don't you agree?" and it's the best way of turning your partner into CHO.
4) Know Your System, and Play It. Mistakes or violations of system are okay with other beginners, because of the above - they don't use the information anyway. But when you play(for instance) Fourth Suit Forcing (second round jumps invitational) with a non-beginner, and don't make the call, that says something. If you should have used 4SF, that something is usually +200. Know Your System and Play It (and don't let anyone change it as pickup), and partner will at least know what you have in your hand.
I realize that this isn't true "beginners" I'm talking about...
Michael.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)