PROS how can one live out of bridge
#1
Posted 2005-March-19, 09:20
i see so many italians, polish, american players and not only playing everywhere; do they end up earning enough out of the prizes to cover all expenses?
tx.
#2
Posted 2005-March-19, 09:36
#3
Posted 2005-March-19, 13:23
puidedac, on Mar 19 2005, 10:20 AM, said:
Certainly not in America, and I doubt elsewhere. The big money made playing bridge comes mostly from being paid to play as a partner or team mate. There is also the possibility of making money by teaching bridge, or running bridge games, but I don't think this is what you were really asking about.
#4
Posted 2005-March-19, 15:29
#5
Posted 2005-March-19, 18:19
I know someone who does this. He has three U.S. national titles. When I have played him, it seems that he can see through the backs of the cards.
If you are going to make a living this way, I don't think being "very good" will be good enough.
Peter
#6
Posted 2005-March-20, 02:13
The_Hog, on Mar 19 2005, 09:29 PM, said:
Who are these people making money off?
There would have to be enough people who play in big money rubber bridge even though they know they are going to lose big money.
Who are they?
Eric
#7
Posted 2005-March-20, 02:18
Don't forget that a lot of people have a much inflated opinion of ther own game. A guy I play with on occasion won $100,000Aud playing Backgammon in Sydney in one afternoon a few years ago. (settled for $5000 cash and was paid in cash there on the spot - the other guy just took it out of his wallet. (My pd didn't want his legs broken by insisting on the full amount and at least this way he was paid and the guy played again.)
#8
Posted 2005-March-20, 02:34
The_Hog, on Mar 20 2005, 08:18 AM, said:
Don't forget that a lot of people have a much inflated opinion of ther own game. A guy I play with on occasion won $100,000Aud playing Backgammon in Sydney in one afternoon a few years ago. (settled for $5000 cash and was paid in cash there on the spot - the other guy just took it out of his wallet. (My pd didn't want his legs broken by insisting on the full amount and at least this way he was paid and the guy played again.)
My wallet wouldn't even hold $5,000!
It still strikes me as strange that these people are prepared to lose so much money (and their experience, if they are regulars, must have told them that they are going to lose).
Of course, if it is the case the amount they lose is not a lot of money to them then it is a shame that they they can't find a more worthy cause to donate their money to. Unless, for example, Seres and Courtney are using their bridge to help fund their important medical research
Eric
#9
Posted 2005-March-20, 02:41
A friend of mine plays pro bridge. Apparantly there are these very rich sponsors, who are quite happy to give him about $500 for playing in a weekend congress somewhere in the world, and pay his hotel and air fair on top of that. Guess it just shows it's not what you know......
#10
Posted 2005-March-20, 02:44
I agree, Eric. I am on a teacher's salary. I am lucky if my wallet holds $20.00.
#11
Posted 2005-March-20, 07:06
I have to say that visiting these two places was actually quite depressing. TGR's is in a basement just off Hyde Park and St John's Wood is in a basement somewhere just north of there. Both are pretty dingy, and the thought of spending 24 hours a day in there trying to win a few quid I find really quite depressing when there is such a big wide world out there to see.
Just my two pennies worth.
Alan
#12
Posted 2005-March-20, 07:56
EricK, on Mar 20 2005, 03:34 AM, said:
I suppsoe you've never beento Las Vegas, Monte Carlo, Foxwoods, etc.
#13
Posted 2005-March-20, 08:47
TimG, on Mar 20 2005, 01:56 PM, said:
EricK, on Mar 20 2005, 03:34 AM, said:
I suppsoe you've never beento Las Vegas, Monte Carlo, Foxwoods, etc.
You are right!
But I would imagine that the odds are better in a casino than they are in rubber bridge game with experts.
Eric
#14
Posted 2005-March-20, 09:29
In either case, if you play long enough you will lose all of your money.
Peter
#15
Posted 2005-March-20, 10:19
#16
Posted 2005-March-20, 11:42
Someone that has a 20K loss at Vegas over a 3 day junket isnt a a big fish anymore.
At any given time in the off-season, a major hotel will have roughly a dozen players with a 7 figure credit limit. Multpily the number of people by 10 during the busy times like new years eve, super bowl, etc.. And we aren't talking about the Bill Gates and Warren Buffets of the world.
So why should any of us be shocked when the wealthy want to drop 5K in an afternoon at a bridge club?
Biggest game I've heard of around here is a $100 per IMP game with rotating pairs on the west side of LA. I've been tempted......
#17
Posted 2005-March-21, 17:43
There are people who are willing to pay $1000/day plus expenses to play with (around) great bridge players. If I'm in that bracket, why shouldn't I play cutaround rubber, where most days I'll lose $1500 to those experts, but some days it'll be $300, and I get a story I can tell for years the day I come out ahead?
After all, I get to play with, and against, and learn from, those same experts...
Now, I'm not such a person. I don't have that much money, I don't have that cavalier an attitude to money (I spent 5 days at the Nationals in Reno last year and bet... $0.00) and I don't gamble when I play games - because among everything else, the chance of cheating in $0.02/point games is probably higher than even online - at the $10/point games, they can afford to do security and you only get caught once...
But I can understand it for those who are like that.
Side story; I remember playing against someone in Toronto at the Nationals who was "taking a break" from his work by playing over his head at the bridge table. He'd just come out of LV having come third in the WSOP. He told us he works about 40 days a year - *very long days*, though. And I bet they're really stressful, even though he knows that (of the non-tournament games) he's likely to be out of pocket at the end of the day maybe once. *Just not today, please...*
Michael.
#18
Posted 2005-March-22, 04:29
The_Hog, on Mar 20 2005, 09:18 PM, said:
Don't forget that a lot of people have a much inflated opinion of ther own game. A guy I play with on occasion won $100,000Aud playing Backgammon in Sydney in one afternoon a few years ago. (settled for $5000 cash and was paid in cash there on the spot - the other guy just took it out of his wallet. (My pd didn't want his legs broken by insisting on the full amount and at least this way he was paid and the guy played again.)
Think U jave the right idea - as for me WHENEVER I play Rubber I ALMOST never get reasonable cards - SO RARELY win - which is why I won't play rubber (unless for matchsticks )
ALSO I am not NEARLY rich (or a good enuff player) to contemplate playing for TEN dollars a point !!!!!
#19
Posted 2005-March-22, 07:29
#20
Posted 2005-March-24, 10:49
Would one really make much money off that?
How many copies does a top selling Bridge book sell? (Where is the major book market?)
How much does the author get per copy?
If Geir Helgemo wrote a book, I assume it would sell in Norway, but what about the US?
(I use him as an example because he's a strong player from a country where English is not the main language, and Norway is a small county population wise)
I think the real money is to kidnap the wife of a rich bridge player and demand $1,000,000 ransom.