I need to ask this question opinions wanted please
#1
Posted 2006-September-29, 23:38
If you think so why and if you don't what level in the states is an expert to reach before he / she is classed an expert.
#2
Posted 2006-September-30, 00:57
Certainly any grand life master qualifies as an expert. They've won a national-level event after all. But beyond this it's pretty hard to tell. There are plenty of expert-caliber american players with under a thousand points, and some players with several thousand who I wouldn't qualify as experts.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted 2006-September-30, 05:29
In England I reckon about 5-7% of current players are Life Masters or above. According to the ACBL website ~40% of the players have the masterpoints for Life Master (although they may not have the right colors).
The English Life Master rank is approximately equivalent to 2100 MPs, so nearer a Gold Life Master than a Silver one.
Although the Scottish points system is the same the English, national (red) points are handed out more freely than in the south so the number of Life Masters is higher. Of course, that may explain why the major congresses up here are often 'raided' by southerners.
And none of this correlates with being an expert. Of which there are few!
But if you are asking whose advice (and play) to believe, then there are many who can teach but not really play, and many, many experts who can play and not teach ... in fact most of us post here
Paul
#4
Posted 2006-September-30, 08:41
I am quite confident whos advice I listen to, I have quite a good mentor, who does not steer me wrong
#5
Posted 2006-September-30, 10:48
Like everyone on BBO I have played with and against players who classify themselves as expert or even world class who can follow suit only because the software insists. It's OK.
#6
Posted 2006-September-30, 11:38
OTOH, I'm sure there are a few players with 500 points better than me (hopefully not too many
But if I had to choose between a random team with players of an average of 500 MP and a team with 1,000 MPs, I will choose the team with the higher amount.
I have about 1,300 now, which makes me a silver. I'm much more pleased with the national overall finishes I've had. There's a player in our club that has averaged close to 800 points over the last 6-7 years, and just got his Diamond (5K).
To my knowledge, he has NEVER played in a national event.
#7
Posted 2006-September-30, 12:02
Quote
No.
Quote
Total masterpoints ~= (length of career) * (tournament attendance rate) * (skill level) * (masterpoint inflation factor)
If you've played for a long time & regularly attend, you can have lots of MP but not be all that good. One also has to define "expert". If go by BBO website's definition, in my opinion that definition of expert is ~= world class, since it says "success in major national events", and I think to finish near top at major NABC events you would also be contender at world level, and certainly above par of most country's WC representatives which is the "world class" def.
But I think most people use a more lenient definition of expert, consistent winning at regional events would be enough. I would cede expert status to any grand LM & many diamond LM, as long as bulk of points wasn't accumulated as a client on pro team of > 3 pros. It's fairly hard to accumulate 5000 ACBL points without decent skill level IMO, without pros. Below that, you have some experts who haven't played long enough or don't play regularly, and also many merely good players who have played for decades.
#8
Posted 2006-September-30, 12:09
I think a lot of us that post on here clearly fit the category of the E-word, and I'm not ashamed to put it on my profile. Do I always play to the level I'm capable of? Of course not, especially when I'm online.
I guess all I can offer Wayne is to enjoy the 'process' of becoming better; and not worry too much about the 'end'. Thats what its all about.
#9
Posted 2006-September-30, 13:31
The same is not true for most countries and the definitions we use for the various skill levels are designed to be as country-neutral as possible. It might be appropriate to add a footnote to the definition of "expert" like "if you have won a few top flight ACBL Regional Knockout events then you are an expert, but tournaments that took place is East Dakota don't count because the bridge there is not very good.", but I don't want to go down this road. Last thing we need is for these definitions to be pages long due to the footnotes that might be required to satisfy people from everywhere.
The skill levels are older than their definitions. I originally meant "world class" to be something that only truly excellent players would pick. On most other sites "expert" was about the best thing that people called themselves and I had seen a lot of people on these sites (and ours) who called themselves "experts" but were not even close. I expected these people would call themselves "experts" on BBO too, but I was hoping that most would have enough humility to not call themselves "world class".
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com
#10
Posted 2006-September-30, 14:05
The Netherlands has an interesting measure similar to tennis ATP ratings. The best MP scores each year are counted. Then for each previous year the weight is lower and lower. And... presto! The strong players are ranked at the top.
Masterpoints however are a terrible measure of strength. I just checked on a young Dutch player who reached the Olympiad final in the WBF masterpoint list and the Dutch Bridge Federation MP list. If a player is in the WBF top 100 in Master Points but not in the national top 100 that just shows how accurate the rating is. On the other hand the rating (ATP style) has this player in the national top 10.
#11
Posted 2006-September-30, 14:09
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. m
s
t
r-m
nd
ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees."Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#12
Posted 2006-September-30, 17:06
#13
Posted 2006-September-30, 18:49
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
#14
Posted 2006-September-30, 23:53
#15
Posted 2006-October-01, 01:42
1eyedjack, on Sep 30 2006, 08:09 PM, said:
Why does bridge need this though?
Chess manages well enough without any "awards for longevity". What is it about so many bridge players that they don't seem to want to play just for the fun of it, or to see how well they can do in the event they are currently playing in?
#16
Posted 2006-October-01, 07:20
I guess I would like it if there were some online tourneys with some floor ability required to enter. Given the world scope of bbo, it would be tough to find criteria. But it would be good to have events where, for example, gross overbidding is more frequently punished. Also it would be good if, when you think for ten seconds, the opponents don't start sending "please play" nessages. Generally I am a happy camper with bbo, in fact I am very happy, but some tourneys with a higher standard of play would be very welcome.
#17
Posted 2006-October-01, 09:39
if i could trade them in for something useful (kinda like airline miles) I'd actually bother collecting them.
As far as i can tell the only purpose of the darn things is to provide some sort of measure of how much cash an individual has poured into the ACBL (or perhaps some other organization).
Also, since the ACBL allows for handicapping, (even at regional level events), knockout wins don't mean as much as they once did -- I mean, if you are a group of advanced/intermediate players and you come into a 28 or whatnot board match up a 30 IMP margin, it isn't that tough to win against a true expert team -- need a bit of luck, but odds are certainly higher than if it started 0:0...
#18
Posted 2006-October-01, 10:22
#19
Posted 2006-October-01, 17:10
I suspect that this is a common situation amongst good players.
If you are looking at a players' points to determine how good they are, then you are not an expert yourself.
I know at at least two Grand Life Masters I would not class as experts: good players, yes, experts no. There are a number of players with far fewer points who are experts: they simply haven't played in enough events to accumulate the points that others may have, without equivalent skill.
#20
Posted 2006-October-03, 19:41
To me thats a complete waste of money. If you don't earn something on your own merit, you haven't won anything and are just deluding yourself.
Why list ones ACBL Master status on ones profile? Either put Advanced or Expert.

Help
