Talking a good game of bridge
#1
Posted 2015-December-09, 07:44
Do you find that some people can speak with great fluency and clarity about a bridge hand, but are basically telling you five ways how they just failed to make the contract?
OTOH, do you know strong players out there who aren't very clear at articulating how they handled the position? It seems like if you understand the position (clearly), then you can probably talk about it (clearly), but maybe not in the immediate aftermath of the hand? I'm wondering if some of us have visualisation processes that just don't lend themselves to rapid translation?
Not a strong player myself, but find it interesting that I'm pretty poor at verbalising the play of the hand just afterwards, and used to get a bit intimidated at the way some players can immediately roll out a detailed analysis. Their apparent analytical rigour, however, is not matched by their results in many cases- they talk a good game.
#2
Posted 2015-December-09, 08:00
London UK
#3
Posted 2015-December-09, 10:15
el mister, on 2015-December-09, 07:44, said:
Yes, Magnus Carlsen:
Quote
Luckily, he doesn't play bridge:
Quote
#4
Posted 2015-December-09, 10:32
#5
Posted 2015-December-09, 12:35
#6
Posted 2015-December-09, 14:02
If a thought happens to be wrong, i can usually immediately tell that it's wrong as soon as i try to articulate it into speech. It goes as far that if the thought is seriously flawed i start to stutter and can't really explain it The entire time the thought was not uttered, it was very convincing.
I think that speech is tightly linked to logic. I'm not sure how the brain works in general, but i think that it often doesn't use logic. Logic is computationally too expensive. If i was talking in my head all the time when playing bridge i could play much better, but it would take very long to play a board
#7
Posted 2015-December-10, 06:33
- "This auction suggests a trump lead because .... "
Not so helpful postmortems:
- "You miscounted the clubs"
- "My pet convention would have been helpful"
- "Trust partner" (but: when you have described your hand accurately, then you CAN trust partner's decisions).
#8
Posted 2015-December-10, 07:59
It doesn't matter, some people can remember everything about deals 50 years ago, don't be intimidated...everyone is different.
#9
Posted 2015-December-10, 08:18
This also means I am terrible at claiming, I know I can make the hand foolproof by playing something now, but I don't know yet how.
#10
Posted 2015-December-10, 08:37
Fluffy, on 2015-December-10, 08:18, said:
This also means I am terrible at claiming, I know I can make the hand foolproof by playing something now, but I don't know yet how.
Also, you are awful at being a smartass on BBF, compared to your bridge success in the real world. Sorry, someone had to say it.
#11
Posted 2015-December-10, 09:01
cherdano, on 2015-December-10, 08:37, said:
On the other hand ...
-gwnn
#12
Posted 2015-December-10, 10:49
No, I've never heard a poor player speak "with great fluency and clarity" about a bridge hand. People who can visualize the cards hours after the fact can usually also visualize the cards when they actually need to.
On the other hand there are some very good players who either don't communicate well or just choose not to explain themselves.
#13
Posted 2015-December-10, 10:59
Seriously, the more I learn about bridge the more I learn to shut up because I realize how stupid my postmortems used to be.
#14
Posted 2015-December-10, 12:11
gordontd, on 2015-December-09, 08:00, said:
Where is this from? I remember hearing it years ago, but forget the source.
https://www.youtube....hungPlaysBridge
#15
Posted 2015-December-10, 12:15
edit: Tartakower or Tarrasch, looked it up.
George Carlin
#16
Posted 2015-December-10, 15:06
#17
Posted 2015-December-10, 15:37
#18
Posted 2015-December-10, 15:48
If any pickup partner discusses errors I may make while ignoring any discussion of ones I know they made, They go on my permanent ignore list.
When I learned to snow ski years ago an instructor told me not to go on runs that my freinds suggest because my friend were not eager to teach me to ski, they were eager to convince me how well they could ski.
Bridge is much the same.
#19
Posted 2015-December-10, 21:45
#20
Posted 2015-December-10, 22:31
Fluffy, on 2015-December-10, 21:45, said:
That's the spirit!
-- Bertrand Russell