Why am I being shunned? Always rejected
#1
Posted 2016-August-11, 11:29
Many times I have started my own table and requested a 2/1 partner. 90% of the time I get someone who plays SEF or Polish Club or something else foreign to me and I'm shooting in the dark, especially as very few of the players will even say anything about what they play or how they signal. I think that the "Take me to the first open seat" feature is responsible.
I am wondering if my newness is responsible for me being refused. I looked at my profile and I have a 100% hand completion rate so that isn't the issue. I list myself as Advanced and my listed conventions imply that I have some clue, so that doesn't appear to be the problem, although maybe it is. I refuse to call myself an Expert since I feel an expert is somebody that people might pay to play with, and I definitely don't qualify, although I sometimes play live with my friends with thousands of master points and nobody is unhappy to draw me as a partner (I don't do tournament bridge myself.) I have learned that others classify differently though, most "experts" do not realize that double and correct shows significant extra values. I really hope my self-classification isn't the reason I'm being shunned.
If there is some secret place where past scores are shown, that is not what is causing players to reject me, for the few times I have played with a random partner against two random opponents, my IMP score is usually at least twice theirs.
So can one of the experienced players on the site tell me why (a) all 2/1 players that play std/UDCA have to lock their partner's seat, and (b) when I try to play in that seat, I am only allowed to play 0.2% of the time?
#2
Posted 2016-August-11, 14:26
Please don't ignore me because you think answering me would imply that you were one who shunned me. I really don't care about that and I don't remember any of the shunning usernames anyway. I would appreciate honest input about what I need to do differently in the future to be allowed to play with someone that plays a system I'm comfortable with, or failing that, how to start a table and attract partners who play 2/1 and either card standardly or UDCA. I do know that I could put locks on my seats (or maybe I can't because I'm too new to the site) but that just seems so unfriendly and I'd like a different option.
#3
Posted 2016-August-11, 15:02
The large number of conventions in your profile could be a problem. Many of the people who play with randoms want to keep things simple, they just play SAYC with a few gadgets. If you want to be able to sit at random tables, you probably need to be more flexible.
While it's possible to look up a player's history on the myhands web site, a table host making the accept/reject decision when you try to sit isn't likely to have that page open.
#4
Posted 2016-August-11, 15:07
.
#5
Posted 2016-August-11, 15:48
nige1, on 2016-August-11, 15:07, said:
.
I may try that only as an experiment to see if it makes a difference. But I'll know I'm lying
#6
Posted 2016-August-11, 15:53
#7
Posted 2016-August-11, 16:06
barmar, on 2016-August-11, 15:02, said:
barmar, on 2016-August-11, 15:02, said:
barmar, on 2016-August-11, 15:02, said:
I asked the wrong question. What I should have asked is, "If you lock seats and sometimes reject players, how do you make the decision to reject someone?" I think that might be more likely to start an honest conversation than my OP which might be read as "Boo-hoo! Nobody likes me!" despite that this wasn't my intent at all.
#8
Posted 2016-August-11, 16:08
diana_eva, on 2016-August-11, 15:53, said:
Ah, I never thought of that. It's possible that I'm just too slow to grab seats, but it seems odd that the seat is still clickable all those times.
I guess there is no way to tell the difference?
#9
Posted 2016-August-11, 16:15
Kaitlyn S, on 2016-August-11, 16:08, said:
I guess there is no way to tell the difference?
There is a Refresh button at the top of the list, that will update status of seats free/taken, but that would reload the whole list so you'd be forced to start over. I think a more practical way to find a seat that isn't totally random is to use Help me find a game > Show interesting tables. This provides a selection of tables you'd be likely to enjoy.
#10
Posted 2016-August-11, 20:28
diana_eva, on 2016-August-11, 16:15, said:
#11
Posted 2016-August-11, 20:45
Kaitlyn S, on 2016-August-11, 20:28, said:
You're overthinking this whole table search IMO. Those tables might be interesting to you. They're just a shorter list so you won't need to wander through all of Main Club and, like you experienced, have the seats occupied by the time you've made up your mind where to apply.
You can click to join, host might accept or might not. If they reject, I'm quite sure they would not remember you 1 second later
#12
Posted 2016-August-11, 20:55
Three different players ask to sit in one same free seat. Host might simply check one, if he looks fine, accept and reject the others without even checking. This is a race for the host too, if host takes too long to choose someone, the players will give up and leave.
#13
Posted 2016-August-11, 21:37
diana_eva, on 2016-August-11, 20:55, said:
Three different players ask to sit in one same free seat. Host might simply check one, if he looks fine, accept and reject the others without even checking. This is a race for the host too, if host takes too long to choose someone, the players will give up and leave.
I think I might be getting an answer to my original question - your screenshot was very helpful in that regard.
Probably most of the time I click on a seat, the host gets multiple entries. Since experienced users probably click faster, so they appear at the top of the list. Also those numbers, for example the 7+ on anaarepere (which mean tournament success, I'm guessing?) are going to be chosen before me. Friends of the host will be also. So it appears that what is happening is that I'm not being chosen because others are either faster or are more proven. Which is cool - at least I understand the process more now. Thanks very much for your help, Diana.
This thread might have a happy ending for me - I got two very nice invitations in my mailbox! I wasn't fishing for invites but I'm looking forward to playing with them.
#14
Posted 2016-August-12, 02:27
Welcome to BBO and the forum
All the other commentators, especially Diana, have more than adequately covered all the bases except one, I feel. What time of day do you play?
When you find many players with their main systems as SEF or Polish Club, I am making an assumption that you are trying to find a partner in prime European time, as opposed to prime USA time.
Obviously, there are players from all around the world who play some form of 2/1, but the vast majority of 2/1 players, and for that matter, BBO bridge players, are going to be American. And most people, I assume too, play after work, or at weekends.
I'm sure you will find partners easily, especially if you keep your completion rate at 100%. Good luck with your bridge and enjoy.
#15
Posted 2016-August-12, 03:54
I may be biased as I rank myself as advanced
I suggest enrolling in free tourneys and join some of the clubs like IAC and BBO fans
If you find a player you do well with, "follow" them and then ask them if they would like to partner you in casual games
#16
Posted 2016-August-12, 05:48
You might like to try Robot World - especially the Bingo Races and Robot Reward Best Hands. The Instant Tournaments (choose MP or IMPS)are also very convenient. None require any human partners. I play loads and I haven't played with a human partner in many years!
#17
Posted 2016-August-12, 05:58
Another point is that in Acol there is less likelihood of conflicting or unfamiliar 'gadgets' seeing as there are fewer of them!
And I might add, downgrading yourself to 'intermediate' might be a come-on signal, however much you may feel the pain! Nearly everyone in the Acol club ranks themselves 'intermediate' and I've encountered some cracking good players there! (Also some who are - ahem - not so good ). Point being, 'intermediate' looks like neither an over-rating nor an under-rating: instead it looks more like an honest rating.
Anyway, good luck with your future hunt for games!
#18
Posted 2016-August-12, 06:27
Table hosts lock seats so that they can screen players. With unlocked seats, you will get mostly weak players.
As said, in many cases you are not being rejected, just someone else was accepted first. In other cases, hosts reject players for various reasons: displayed skill level, content of profile, completion rate, total logins, flag displayed in profile, etc. Basically anything that they can see about me, they might use as a reason to reject me.
One suggestion, worry less about finding specific items in the profile. I find that focusing on flags works just as well - a USA, Canada, or western Europe flag should be usually be compatible. And most players will accept standard carding if you ask . Personally I always say no odd/even please, and nobody has ever insisted.
Admittedly I do find Polish bidding incomprehensible. So I avoid playing with Polish flags. One of those things.
661_Pete, on 2016-August-12, 05:58, said:
Maybe Acol club is different, but my experience in the MBC is that "intermediate" almost always indicates a weak player. There are a few good ones but the success rate is very low.
-gwnn
#19
Posted 2016-August-12, 08:22
#20
Posted 2016-August-12, 08:33
Reasons for rejecting requests:
- I planed to play with three robots as I only have a few minutes before the next meeting. I just didn't get the robots seated yet. During the 5 secs it takes to seat three robots (a lot more if I need to purchase bbo dollars first or if my connection is very slow) I often get a handful of requests.
- I am waiting for a regular partner to arrive.
- A player left and I want to ask his partner about preferences first before I look for a partner for him.
- I get a bunch of requests, accept one, reject the rest.
- We just stopped playing. I will typically get a handful of requests before I get through the "thanks opps and merry christsmas" ritual and get the table closed.
When I actually take the effort to look at the profile of the requester, I accept most of the time. I would only reject people that I have a "rude and clueless" player note on, or who has some completely obscene things in his profile. That happens very rarely.
Given the choice I would avoid "experts" unless they are gold stars or have a name I recognize from the bridge literature.