I play my worst bridge when I'm: Long matches
#41
Posted 2010-April-12, 10:22
Way I overcame - play with random OKB people. They will do their best to annoy you, if their software was not bad enough. If you want to practice self-control with the worst-skilled partner, play random on BBO and challenge yourself to give it your all on every one. Remember in all this never to say anything negative or expect anything positive from partner.
I promise you will get better!
Thanks,
Dan
#42
Posted 2010-April-12, 11:00
I don't go on tilt. Generally have good focus.
Most of my mistakes are just exacerbated by the above because in general they come from my suckiness.
#43
Posted 2010-April-12, 12:17
BTW: When I say I play badly after something I don't mean I have bad results due to it, I am realicing I am having no f** clue of what is going on at the table, to the point of being unable to count when very very tired.
#44
Posted 2010-April-12, 12:56
1. I would accept we all have natural variance, however, at the tails the variance rates to become smaller on both ends. A 1 is going to suck regardless, but will sometimes make the right play. Meckstroth is going to play like a god, but occasionally will have a bad session for whatever reason. A 'middling' player, especially an emotional player may very well have a wide range depending on a lot of factors.
2. Whats important to me, isn't so much that we have variance, but not only doing what we can to play at our peak, but also to minimize the occurrences of those bad sets. Take your 7.5 player. Usually, the distributions for this person are in a 7.0 - 8.0 range. On a 'bad' day, he might slip to a 6.5, but on a good day, he can rise to a 9.0.
It seems to me that this same player, by simply controlling the mental and physical aspects can move the distributions to the right, although without some serious study I would say that a 9.0 is the best he's going to play on any day. As a result, his ranking may move up a few tenths, simply through better preparation.
Some hands will always be tougher for some that others. And now matter how perfect our preparation is, and how effective our approach is, there are going to be bad days.
I used to have this site bookmarked. Glad to see she updated it.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#45
Posted 2010-April-12, 13:16
One main reason appears to be missing "Airless and warm stuffy atmosphere in the playing area"
Another is when looking at partner who is akin to a Skyscraper where you can see the lights being turned off 1 floor at a time
#46
Posted 2010-April-12, 13:39
George Carlin
#47
Posted 2010-April-12, 13:44
Maybe I am projecting though
1) They were too hard or complicated for your level of play, so you couldn't reasonably be expected to get it right (this could mean anything depending on where you're at in your bridge life).
2) They were not too hard, and you said after the hand "Obv I should have played a spade, here is why."
#2 mistakes should be eliminated, and we must assume that the person just didn't think it through long enough before making their error, since they were capable of getting it right. This could be just a lack of concentration or w/e, but generally it means you played too fast and didn't think the position through long enough.
One simple way to try to avoid this happening is asking yourself before you play any card "why am I playing this card?" If you have no reason, think through it a little bit more.
#48
Posted 2010-April-12, 13:49
Phil, on Apr 12 2010, 01:56 PM, said:
Heh, I don't think we actually disagree on this subject. I was simply offering more reasons and often the biggest reason that people don't perform well.
Obviously I believe you can do things to increase how well you play on average and also decrease your variance, such as sleeping/excersizing/whatever floats your boat.
I do think that if someone slept 6 hours instead of their normal 8 and had a bad session, it's more likely due to natural variance than the missing 2 hours of sleep, and they're likely to attribute too much blame to the missing 2 hours of sleep. That being said, it's clearly better to get 8 hours of sleep than 6 if thats what you need.
Obv if you take some extreme and you got 0 hours of sleep or someone close to you died or something there is no chance you're gonna play well though.
#49
Posted 2010-April-12, 13:52
It's often the case that when I have a tough decision to make, there are conflicting pieces of information suggesting that different actions might be successful. For example, when taking a two way guess for a queen I might figure that one opponent has more vacant spaces, whereas the other opponent showed more values in the auction, and now I have "reasons" to take either decision.
With this in mind, it's often easy to make a decision, get it wrong, and then say "oh, I should've done the opposite because X." But it's not really the case that I didn't play slowly enough or think clearly enough to realize about X... it's that there was another reason Y to do the opposite. Perhaps I misevaluated the relative weights of X vs. Y... or perhaps I did nothing wrong and was just unlucky.
There certainly are unlucky sessions, where it seems like every guess is wrong, almost every decision is wrong, and even the "good" decisions are not swinging any scores our way. But it's also the case that sometimes we just don't show up ready to play, and make an unusual number of uncharacteristic mistakes on "easy" (for our level) things. It's important to avoid the latter situation (at least for serious events) to the degree possible, while accepting that "bad luck" is just part of the game.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#50
Posted 2010-April-12, 14:02
Jlall, on Apr 12 2010, 01:49 PM, said:
Phil, on Apr 12 2010, 01:56 PM, said:
Heh, I don't think we actually disagree on this subject. I was simply offering more reasons and often the biggest reason that people don't perform well.
Obviously I believe you can do things to increase how well you play on average and also decrease your variance, such as sleeping/excersizing/whatever floats your boat.
I do think that if someone slept 6 hours instead of their normal 8 and had a bad session, it's more likely due to natural variance than the missing 2 hours of sleep, and they're likely to attribute too much blame to the missing 2 hours of sleep. That being said, it's clearly better to get 8 hours of sleep than 6 if thats what you need.
Obv if you take some extreme and you got 0 hours of sleep or someone close to you died or something there is no chance you're gonna play well though.
Ya I think everyone who cites "tired" as a reason is more or less saying the same thing just in different ways.
I would never attribute a bad session to 6 hours of sleep; I would attribute 10 days of 6 hours of sleep with 3 sessions per day as a reason for being exhausted at the end. My play is noticeably and undeniably worse in this case, and it is not just a case of greater variance but that the mean decreases a few points on the 1-10 scale.
bed
#51
Posted 2010-April-12, 15:00
Jlall, on Apr 12 2010, 07:44 PM, said:
Maybe I am projecting though
1) They were too hard or complicated for your level of play, so you couldn't reasonably be expected to get it right (this could mean anything depending on where you're at in your bridge life).
2) They were not too hard, and you said after the hand "Obv I should have played a spade, here is why."
#2 mistakes should be eliminated, and we must assume that the person just didn't think it through long enough before making their error, since they were capable of getting it right. This could be just a lack of concentration or w/e, but generally it means you played too fast and didn't think the position through long enough.
One simple way to try to avoid this happening is asking yourself before you play any card "why am I playing this card?" If you have no reason, think through it a little bit more.
I remember you aceepted 10 players to send you some hands where you would point the many mistakes they make on simple hands.
How many mistakes did you find people make on average?
#52
Posted 2010-April-12, 15:11
Fluffy, on Apr 12 2010, 04:00 PM, said:
Jlall, on Apr 12 2010, 07:44 PM, said:
Maybe I am projecting though
1) They were too hard or complicated for your level of play, so you couldn't reasonably be expected to get it right (this could mean anything depending on where you're at in your bridge life).
2) They were not too hard, and you said after the hand "Obv I should have played a spade, here is why."
#2 mistakes should be eliminated, and we must assume that the person just didn't think it through long enough before making their error, since they were capable of getting it right. This could be just a lack of concentration or w/e, but generally it means you played too fast and didn't think the position through long enough.
One simple way to try to avoid this happening is asking yourself before you play any card "why am I playing this card?" If you have no reason, think through it a little bit more.
I remember you aceepted 10 players to send you some hands where you would point the many mistakes they make on simple hands.
How many mistakes did you find people make on average?
Bleh still havent done them all, thanks for reminding me
Obviously it depends on the level of the player.
#53
Posted 2010-April-12, 15:19
But I guess you won't make the numbers untill you are finished, so go do some homework cos I want the stats
#54
Posted 2010-April-12, 15:54
I also think I play a bit worse when I have a good kibitzer (which not surprisingly is rare); novice kibitzers are fine.
The number one reason is exhaustion, especially for the second session. I can't eat, drink, not exercise, or talk about bridge in between sessions if I want to play well in the second half of a two session event. I learned a while ago to avoid intermediary post-mortems as much as possible. I honestly think I'd be better suited to play 52 consecutive boards.
#55
Posted 2010-April-12, 16:20
I find Justin's statement pretty interesting. I have observed on several occasions myself that even after a slight lack of sleep, I've played a pretty good set of 24 boards the following day, whereas I've had really bad days even with enough sleep. Unfortunately, I'm not quite sure if there's any good way to test this out rigorously, but it most certainly is food for thought as one of my friends used to say that each hour of sleep is worth 5(?) imps.
Unless explicitly stated, none of my views here can be taken to represent SCBA or any other organizations.
#56
Posted 2010-April-12, 17:00
#59
Posted 2010-April-12, 20:13
George Carlin
#60
Posted 2010-April-12, 20:14
gwnn, on Apr 12 2010, 09:13 PM, said:
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LOL

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