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To win the Bermuda Bowl What is important?

#1 User is offline   Trumpace 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 14:32

To win the Bermuda Bowl, please order the following requirements in order of importance.

1) Slam Bidding
2) Declarer Play
3) Defense
4) Game Bidding
5) Judgement in competition or otherwise.
6) Opening Leads


Please feel free to add any other requirement or change existings ones. Also, please give your reasons.
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#2 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 14:41

Obviously all six are essential. But I think the top players are a lot closer in declarer play than many of the other aspects (in other words, the percentage of hands where the best declarer in the world would make it but another bermuda-bowl-caliber declarer will go down on the same auction and defense is extremely small). This is not to say that anyone whose declarer play is truly "bad" has even a remote chance in a bermuda bowl (they don't). I'd expect the swings to be (from most imps to least):

5. Judgement in competition
6. Opening lead
3. Defense after opening lead
1. Slam bidding
4. Game bidding
2. Declarer play
Adam W. Meyerson
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#3 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 14:50

As someone who once came 19th in the BB, I have the worms' eye view :P

For me, I'd rank:

1. Judgement in competitive auctions, especially at the 4 level and higher

2. slam bidding

3. defence


Declarer play is pretty much a wash amongst the top 100 players in the world. Yes, some are better than others, but the number of times that edge is actually relevant is quite small...they all get well over 90% of the hands 'right', in the sense of a play that is either best or so close to best as to make no difference.

Game bidding, in the sense of purely constructive auctions, also appears to me to be a wash. While some pairs may miss games bid by others, that will usually be on hands where, single-dummy, you can't tell whether you want to be there. And others will be system quirks that balance out (eg if you open 1N on 16 and play 14-16, you may miss a game when partner passes and the opps play 15-17 and responder scrapes up an invitation)

I don't know enough about Fantunes to know the extent to which their system works: I understand that Rodwell has said that their two-bids caused him problems, but obviously there are tradeoffs and it is tough to separate out their skill/judgement from their system advantages. I tend to think they'd be world class playing a more standard method as well B)

Opening leads: not since Katz-Cohen got caught (oh, they didn't get to the BB :P ) Not a big factor imo.


One factor not listed, and very important: consistency... the best players are incredibly focused and simply don't make the kinds of mistakes that bedevil the rest of us. Although, by the end of the BB, those mistakes are cropping up.. which is part of why I really like watching on vugraph. Relaxed at home, seeing all the cards... heck, I can almost play as well as those guys by then! :) :P :) :unsure:
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#4 User is offline   fred 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 16:36

Trumpace, on Sep 19 2007, 08:32 PM, said:

To win the Bermuda Bowl, please order the following requirements in order of importance.

1) Slam Bidding
2) Declarer Play
3) Defense
4) Game Bidding
5) Judgement in competition or otherwise.
6) Opening Leads


Please feel free to add any other requirement or change existings ones. Also, please give your reasons.

By far the most important requirement is: making very few dumb mistakes

Having tried and failed to win the Bermuda Bowl, I am in a good position to know this :(

Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
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#5 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 16:45

How about luck, shouldn't that be on the list as well?
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#6 User is offline   Trumpace 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 16:54

Hannie, on Sep 19 2007, 05:45 PM, said:

How about luck, shouldn't that be on the list as well?

Why?

Let us only look at factors which are in our hands and have a chance to improve on those...
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#7 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2007-September-19, 16:58

I now believe that the whole "the top 100 players in the world are all roughly equal at declarer play" thing is false, though I always used to believe it. I still see a ton of swings at the high levels revolving around declarer play. It seems like only when the very best play the very best (like italy vs usa) play each other that the declarer play does not become a significant factor. However I think when the best team plays even the 5th best team the 5th best team gets crushed in declarer play and cannot recover from that.

The best example I can give from personal experience is the cavendish. You wouldn't believe how many imps you could win from playing a hand correctly and how many pros capable of playing at the bermuda bowl level would misplay hands (and I'm not even talking about the clients). It was staggering to me.
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#8 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 17:26

well, Justin certainly has more experience at the highest levels than I do. Maybe I should have said the top 20 or so B)

Bear in mind that the BB will not actually feature the top 100 players in the world, let alone the top 100 declarers.

In the year I played, we did have Fred on our team, and I like to think we were all pretty good, but (other than Fred) I doubt that many of us would have been in the top 100 (at anything :( ). And that would certainly have been true of several of the other teams. The fact is that the 5th or maybe the 8th or even the 10th best team in the US, especially if not playing with a client, would be as strong or stronger than many of the teams in the BB. The same could be said, to a lesser degree, of several other bridge powers.. their 2nd best would be better than some of the also-rans in the BB and so on)

But I remain of the view that to actually WIN the BB, rather than, say, to get to the actual event, declarer play is not a major differentiating factor. Let's look at a very common recent scenario: the Italians v USA I. Certainly the top two US pairs take a back seat to no-one in terms of declarer play, and we all know how good the Italians are. I am not knocking Nickel-Freeman... I just don't know enough to say if they are on par with the rest of the team in that area.... but they are hardly duffers :)
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#9 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2007-September-19, 18:00

Looks like Mike and I are in agreement, basically I always overestimated the "everyone is good at declarer play" factor I think. I have been really surprised recently.
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#10 User is offline   glen 

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Posted 2007-September-19, 20:48

On slam bidding, a lot of slams are close to 50-50 (on a finesse, or require a split+other good stuff etc.). So a factor in matches between good teams is slam bidding luck - bidding coin flip slams when they make, staying out of coin flip slams when they don't.
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#11 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 00:59

Let me add "mental toughness". Going on to the next board.

Quote

I don't know enough about Fantunes to know the extent to which their system works: I understand that Rodwell has said that their two-bids caused him problems, but obviously there are tradeoffs and it is tough to separate out their skill/judgement from their system advantages. I tend to think they'd be world class playing a more standard method as well


On defense they are maybe the best pair in the world. That helps.
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#12 User is offline   zasanya 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 01:49

As fred has pointed out making "very few dumb mistakes".
It is my belief that dumb mistakes happen when you are tired.So Stamina seems to be an important factor.
Luck of course plays a large part when teams are evenly matched and the luck plays the largest part in the grey area of "judgement".
In my opinion in a long match between two evenly matched teams at any level stamina and "judgement in competitive situations" are the 2 decisive factors
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#13 User is offline   Walddk 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 03:08

zasanya, on Sep 20 2007, 09:49 AM, said:

As fred has pointed out making "very few dumb mistakes".
It is my belief that dumb mistakes happen when you are tired.So Stamina seems to be an important factor.

Stamina is indeed an important factor in a long event like the World Championships. However, at no point will they be playing more than three stanzas of 16 boards per day. Considering that all teams have three pairs, this means that no pair is going to play more than 32 boards a day.

This is hardly much of a challenge at this level. For 14 of the 22 teams in each series the championships are virtually over after 7 days of play. The pairs on those teams will likely take part in the Transnational Teams after they are eliminated.

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#14 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 03:19

Trumpace, on Sep 19 2007, 10:54 PM, said:

Hannie, on Sep 19 2007, 05:45 PM, said:

How about luck, shouldn't that be on the list as well?

Why?

Let us only look at factors which are in our hands and have a chance to improve on those...

Lol, why can't you improve your luck?, haven't you been to the water cooler latelly? :P

just j/k.
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#15 User is offline   sceptic 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 05:49

I would have thought a good partner was the most important thing, followed by a desire to win and the ability to concentrate for long periods of time and a jolly good understanding of all aspects of the game

I also think the ability to behave well, not use drink drugs and prostitutes like the juniors do (lucky bastards) and maintain the dignity of the game and not manage to frighten away newcomers to the game with thier holier than thou attitude
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#16 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 06:38

Given that we are drifting somewhat from the original post that focuses on technical issues:

If I were trying to develop a model predicting performance in the Bermuda Bowl, I'd start by focusing on the size of the pool of players available to construct a team.

As a secondary consideration, I'd look at factors that caused elite pairs to graviate towards a single team or (alternatively) get distributed across multiple teams.
Alderaan delenda est
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#17 User is offline   Aberlour10 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 06:54

Looking back to the last two battles in BB finals I would say....

7) mental strongness

Robert
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#18 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 06:59

World Class bridge is beyond my grasp but as I understand it from more competent observers, the decisive factor in top bridge is card play, in particular the ability to avoid making stupid mistakes. While players at my level lose most IMPs messing up the easy boards (I mess up the difficult ones, too, but there the chance is good that the opps at the other table will mess it up as well) I suppose World Class players lose most IMPs messing up some moderately difficult hands.
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#19 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 07:02

Quote

I also think the ability to behave well, not use drink drugs and prostitutes like the juniors do (lucky bastards) and maintain the dignity of the game and not manage to frighten away newcomers to the game with thier holier than thou attitude



Let's quit that. They don't, just that what the perception is of unfortunately too many people.
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#20 User is offline   ArcLight 

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Posted 2007-September-20, 08:13

>Looks like Mike and I are in agreement, basically I always overestimated the "everyone is good at declarer play" factor I think. I have been really surprised recently


Justin (and anyone else), what are some (non trivial) mistakes you have seen top level players make in major events (Cavendish, BB, etc)

Please give more detail than "Loser on loser"


Fred wrote "Don't make mistakes". Dang, most of us (at least me) probably wouldn't recognize some of those mistakes. Sure it can be something like ruffing with a low trump and not being able to reach dummy later.

I'm curious about what mistakes experts (the real ones) make.
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