how many top pairs in world?
#1
Posted 2013-August-09, 02:15
Lets look at the usa...
67x6 in spingold
20x6 in usbf
now add in world
at some point we look at 100-200 top pairs in world? out of 1-2 million casual players?
I think we forget how few play at the very very top level, today.
#2
Posted 2013-August-09, 02:55
But I think the #200 pair in Poland could compete quite happily in the quarter-finals of the Spingold.
#3
Posted 2013-August-09, 03:30
Many players are not in such an area.
Few players can afford to move to such an area or pay the travel expenses and afford the spare time.
Professional players have a huge advantage, but few areas support such a living.
It is not my impression that the ones, who live from Bridge are necessarily the ones, who are most gifted. Of course there are some.
There are many more gifted players, who will not make it for good reasons: Different priorities.
My impression is more that many, who take this route, are the ones who are most fascinated by the game, which is not the same.
Rainer Herrmann
#4
Posted 2013-August-09, 05:05
#6
Posted 2013-August-09, 09:47
Really this question does not make sense to me. Say you could rank all pairs in the world from best to worst. How far down the "top pairs" go is totally arbitrary. Can the same person be in multiple top pairs? Maybe Hamman plus anyone who can follow suit is a top pair?
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#7
Posted 2013-August-09, 11:10

#8
Posted 2013-August-09, 13:05

As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#9
Posted 2013-August-09, 23:22
There are also a few great players not on here because they need partners. I would classify Curtis Cheek, Ishmael Delmonte, Thomas Bessis, Dennis Bilde, Boye Brogeland, and Jacek Pzecola as applicable (I would also like to include Erik Saelensminde, but he seems to have disappeared off the face of the earth). I know Delmonte and Bessis have played together, but it's not a regular thing. I also get the impression that Alan Sontag is still an outstanding player, but where's the beef?
Pairs I have my eye on are Fisher - Schwartz, Bertheau - Bessis, Upmark - Nystrom, and Ahmady - Sadek.
Meckstroth - Rodwell
Levin - Weinstein
Greco - Hampson
*Grue - Moss
*Hamman - Lall
**Fleisher - Kamil
Balicki - Zmudzinski
Jassem - Martens / Mazurkiewicz - I like Martens better personally
**Buras - Narkiewicz (will move up if Gromov wins the Spingold)
Fantoni - Nunes
**Helgemo - Helness
Lauria - Versace
Bocchi - Madala
**Duboin - Sementa
Brink - Drijver
**Muller - DeWijs
Van Prooijen - Verhees
*Piekarek - Smirnov
*Birman - Padon
*Herbst - Herbst
* - Don't quite have the results as a partnership I would like as of this post
** - At the bottom of the list IMO
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#10
Posted 2013-August-10, 07:35
awm, on 2013-August-09, 09:47, said:
Maybe Hamman plus anyone who can follow suit is a top pair?
Certainly not.
The weaker partner has a much bigger influence on the overall outcome of a partnership than the stronger one, even if the stronger one handles the partnership well.
Rainer Herrmann
#12
Posted 2013-August-12, 04:31
#13
Posted 2013-August-12, 05:12
Zelandakh, on 2013-August-12, 04:31, said:
Assuming the list chase made doesn't count boards since 1996. Given that this was 17 years ago, that's quite a lot of time for bridge to move on/partnerships to decay. The results will be slightly loaded to the present just because of more vugraph probably but still not enough to correct.
#14
Posted 2013-August-12, 05:30
paulg, on 2013-August-09, 02:55, said:
Double.
#16
Posted 2013-August-12, 16:45
rhm, on 2013-August-10, 07:35, said:
The weaker partner has a much bigger influence on the overall outcome of a partnership than the stronger one, even if the stronger one handles the partnership well.
Rainer Herrmann
I disagree, to a degree
I think that your statement is correct when the weaker player is a lot weaker than the stronger one. However, I think a very strong player can carry an expert who is good but not at the same level. The stronger player makes the weaker player better, at least in a good partnership.
Look at Hamman-Wolff. I don't think there was ever any question about who was the truly gifted player in that partnership. Going back a few decades, Roth-Stone were, in their day, one of the top pairs, but who remembers Tobias Stone? Miles-Kantar: Miles never approached the same heights with any other partner, yet Kantar went on to a lot of success.
In the earlier days of the Blue Team, the stars were (I know the lineup changed a lot) Belladonna, Garozzo and Forquet, and they played and won a lot with other team members.
I think this applies at all levels. Speaking from personal experience, there was a brief time in the late 1990s when I was a member of arguably the best imp pair in Canada at the time, but I don't think even my wife thinks that I was ever as good as my partner, who was (imo) the best player in Canada at the time.
#17
Posted 2013-August-14, 05:04
#18
Posted 2013-August-14, 06:33
#19
Posted 2013-August-16, 05:45
32519, on 2013-August-14, 06:33, said:
If you like mikeh consider Wolff to be a second rate player I tend to agree.
But I do not concur with the IF.
Rainer Herrmann
#20
Posted 2013-August-16, 14:14
There are three issues here to me:
1) It is hard to bid very well with a non-world class player, there are lots of holes in their game, some of them in theory and some of them in practice. In particular, slam bidding is very hard for all players, but especially hard for non-world class players.
2) It is really hard to defend at a world class level where one of the players does not know how to signal appropriately. Knowing how to signal, when it's important, and when it's not, is very hard for a non-world class player to learn how to do, since you have to be on the ball the whole hand to know what is going on and to identify partner's problems.
3) This continues to be a point of debate, but I think world class players are much stronger cardplayers/technicians than mere experts. This is much less true in theory (such as BBO forums, where lots of non-experts are perfectly capable of figuring out complex hands given unlimited effort/time/calculation) than in practice. People who play bridge for a living make far, far fewer careless/stupid errors than people who play fewer than 1500 hands a year. By careless/stupid, I mean a problem that is not even difficult enough to be posted in the intermediate/advanced forum.